Bookshelf reread.
This book was easy to get through. The writing style isn’t super deep or “show instead of tell”, but it is fast-paced and it accomplishes what it needs to.
It follows Noelle, who is a poor kid in a rich town where everyone tries to fit in. Her dad is a junkie I think who was never in her life, and for a short time her mom was with a much older guy and they lived with him until he died and willed all his things to his own children, so they had to leave. Rather than find a new town, her mom started renting a small second floor place for cheap from an old lady and working at a market of some sort.
Ever since then, she’s been angry, never really talks or looks Noelle, just complains about her job, and blames Noelle for ruining her life by being born. There is rarely food in the house, most of the good things are in her mom’s room where she risks angering her mom, she has to do most things herself without knowing how, etc. When they first became poor and her mom tried to be secretive about it, Noelle also told people her mom was sick to explain things away, until a friend’s mom saw her and told everyone that Noelle was lying before she could take it back, so all her friends abandoned her except Sherae.
Sherae is good and has noticed some things and discreetly tries to help out, which Noelle doesn’t realize. Sherae is also having her own issues ever since her previously nice boyfriend took things too far and now he won’t leave her alone or understand why she never wants to be near him again.
Noelle is secretly dating bad boy Matt, who wants to keep things a secret, while she prefers Julian who clearly likes her back. She thinks she’s not pretty, yet several boys have liked her. A boy a few grades ahead once asked her out, but she told him to ask people about her first, and after he did he didn’t speak to her again. I don’t get it. But if someone likes her after knowing her “loser” status, maybe she should consider that.
She convinces Matt to go on a date with her, but he never shows up and people from school see her so it’s obvious she was stood up. She tries not to make a big deal of it to Matt when she leaves a voicemail, and he doesn’t reply to her for several days, or a week, and then shrugs it off as him chickening out, even though he never bothered to contact her and let her know he was backing out, or return her call to know what had happened. She allows this because she’s so desperate not to be dumped, even though Julian has also asked her out but she rejected it because she had a boyfriend, but didn’t fully explain that.
Then big bully Carly tells her friend Audrey that Noelle and Matt are always sneaking off, so Audrey finds them and it turns out she’s Matt’s girlfriend, who he actually likes, and he completely ditches Noelle, proving he doesn’t care about her, to chase after Audrey. No one believes that Noelle had no idea, especially after Audrey used to be her friend before she joined the bad crowd and blamed her for eating all her Valentines chocolate from her crush, assuming that meant Noelle was jealous when Noelle was just starving.
News spreads, warped, and Julian tries to ask her about it but she answers poorly, but not poorly enough for his angry storm off.
She’s been trying to avoid the lunchroom, and rich but nice Simon invites her to join the lit mag during that period, and he brings extra food because he’s “indecisive and always orders too much”, so he shares it with the others. She is oblivious that he’s ordering extra because he can tell she needs it. Her stomach often growls in class and certain people check her lunch so they can make fun of it.
I liked Simon and would have liked them to end up together. I thought maybe he wasn’t straight so that was why they wouldn’t be a couple, but by the end he was interested in Sherae, and while she did deserve a nice guy, that combo felt too typical and there was no leading into it, whereas there was actual interaction between him and Noelle. I would prefer him over Julian because Julian only served the purpose of being Noelle’s crush. They both liked art, and Julian liked her despite her being a “loser”. That was it. He got no other personality or identity than that. Simon did.
Noelle always planned to be a teacher so she could be a good one as opposed to the ones who see her get bullied and do nothing.
After the Matt thing, Audrey retaliates with a paintball driveby at the bus stop where Noelle is the only high schooler. Noelle thinks it’s a real gun and keeps standing there to get hit anyway. She ends up going to the school nurse and has to lift her shirt so she can better see the bruises, and the nurse it shocked by her protruding bones from being malnourished, which you only get told near the end of the book.
Carly later comes and harasses her in the empty lit mag room. After that Simon doesn’t leave her alone in there for more than a few minutes at a time, even though I don’t know if Noelle actually told anyone it happened.
She’s not the only bully victim, and she often joins up in group assignments with Ali Walsh, who’s nice but has bad skin and is therefore treated much worse than her. Carly is aggressively physical against Ali whereas she only says mean things to Noelle. (It’s said that Carly beats up her younger brothers, and it’s wrong, but by the end no one ever does anything to fix that, just calls out Carly and knows she won’t change). Noelle likes Ali and is invited to her house often, but she always refuses because she knows being friends with Ali would make the bullies target her worse, so Ali’s alone.
Then in chapter 19, Ali kills herself.
When some people act sad when the grief counselor comes to talk to them, Noelle snorts because the counselor says they blame themselves when there was nothing they could do, and she knows that’s not true. After this she decides to be done putting up with everything and start being honest and not caring about the opinions of people she doesn’t like and won’t see ever again after she graduates.
She confesses her situation to Sherae, who admits the little bit she had guessed and wants to help more. Sherae pushes her to talk to Julian and he decides to give her another chance. The counselor calls in Noelle’s mom to talk to her about how she thinks Noelle’s a suicide risk and is malnourished, and her mom’s angry to be accused of neglecting her daughter. Despite not wanting to be put into state care, Noelle opts for honesty.
She always says she’s afraid of her mom’s wrath, but she confronts her several times throughout the book, and had always accused her of neglect. After hearing Noelle might be suicidal, her mom tears apart her room and finds her “secret box” she’s references throughout the book, finally revealing what’s in it: an exacto knife, a bottle of pills, something else. Noelle says it comforted her but claims she wasn’t going to ever follow through. Ali’s death was a wakeup call for her, and her mom puts in effort after that and Noelle learns to cook.
One of the bullies is named Warner, which would have excited me if I hadn’t read the second Shatter Me trilogy, so instead I didn’t immediately notice that was his name. I didn’t get him. Some characters just lacked depth, and that was all the characters mostly.
Despite her situation, Noelle was fairly spoiled. Sherae stuck by her side and was always taking her places so she could get what she needed, constantly offering to pay, and letting her come over and eat to her heart’s content and spend the night and borrow everything. Simon took care of her and fed her.. She had it hard, but she was never alone. People looked out for her. A nice teacher pulled her aside to give her reassurance and tell her she was always there to talk.
I didn’t get the impression Ali got that same treatment. She had no one while Noelle had a lot of people. So that kind of bothers me.
What I always remembered from my first read was her dinner of wet/stale spaghetti, and that her mom brought home McDonald’s and Noelle started crying while eating it and saying it wasn’t real food and she shouldn’t have to eat this crap.
She also said boiled hotdogs and frozen fries weren’t real food, nor were bright orange carrot cubes. I have eaten all of those things for dinner. They’re food. Some of them I look forward to. Tons of poor, middle class, and even wealthy people can eat these foods as legit meals and be perfectly happy with it. For someone who was starving, Noelle complaining that those perfectly normal foods weren’t real food and she shouldn’t have to live this way felt a little pampered.
I think the first time, I read a review of someone pointing that out, how when you’re really starving, you’ll swallow down everything with relief and just be glad you have any food at all. Everyone’s different though, so I won’t say anything more on that.
Another one of her complaints was that the only shower was in her mom’s bathroom, and her mom didn’t like her using it and waking her up in the morning, so she either had to shower at night or wash up in her bathroom sink instead. She wanted to shower in the morning like a “normal person”. It’s perfectly normal to shower at night. It’s a matter of preference, and while her preference was mornings, that doesn’t invalidate that night showers are perfectly normal and cleanly. It’s not like she’s going to get filthy while she sleeps. It seems like a nitpicky complaint for her to have. I guess it could have to do with her frizzy hair? Maybe she feels it’s better under control if she showers before school?
The cover picture does not match what she describes.
She goes to get a haircut and describes what she wants with drawings to the guy who doesn’t speak much English, then reads a magazine the entire cut only to be horrified by the outcome once he’s done. This doesn’t matter much, I just think it’s weird that she paid no attention to the cut and trusted this guy who very likely didn’t understand her. Or that he didn’t check in, and thought what he assumed she was suggesting was normal. Apparently it was widely agreed upon that it was a legit awful cut and she was insecure about it for the rest of the book.
The point of this story was to encourage and give hope to outcasts and victims of bullying and other high school struggles. Not just high school, but it kept emphasizing teens, so it feels like an exclusive direction. The author also seems to have written it to address some of her own struggles and tell people it gets better. This is good, it just didn’t really resonate with me. The things that were said to inspire hope felt generic, and the style of writing felt like it was written just to get it written. I can’t make that assumption on the intentions of the writer, that’s just how it came across to me.
A lot of these are complaints, but I did speed through the book and looked forward to reading it. I would have finished it a lot faster if I wasn’t alternating between 9 books at once. I decide to go ahead to break my pattern for this one and just read the rest of it though, because I think it was the one I was most enjoying.