Pre-Read Notes:
I have no idea what to expect going in I chose this one for cover and title, as I sometimes do and have always done. What a delight waited for me here, from the first brilliant sentence.
"One thing needs clearing up right off: Reverend King was not the father." p1
Final Review
(thoughts & recs) This book grabbed me right at the opening line. I just knew with that (quoted above), I was in for an entertaining read. I was definitely right. I adore the protagonist, a 16-year-old girl who finds herself pregnant, needing help, and with extended family members she hardly knows, in Atlanta and looking for solutions.
But it's not just the story of a teenage girl dealing with an unwanted pregnancy, it's about all the ways she discovers who she is and where she belongs by taking that journey. A gorgeous, fraught story of coming of age-- now a favorite example in a favorite genre for me. This character is scared but dignified. She speaks her mind but is not immune to growth. She is blunt and unrehearsed but she is deep down a romantic. What a brilliant journey she took me on.
This book manages to handle multiple issues of social justice with style and a forthrightness, through the fmc, that I really admire. I like when speakers speak plainly and writers write plainly. I love when I know exactly what a writer is trying to say. And I got that from this book. A stimulating and thought-provoking read.
I recommend THESE HEATHENS to anyone interested in racial history of the US, especially its southern states, fans of historical fiction, readers who want to read more diversely, readers of feminist women's fiction, and to fans of unexpected coming of age dramas.
My 2 Favorite Things:
✔️ I love the narrating character, how much she finds everything repulsive and yet how quiet and acquiescent she seemed. Her development comes from encountering other characters, each of whom she measure against her Christian values, all while she seeks an abortion, illegal in most southern states at the time of this telling. The irony is thick like butter.
✔️ This book deftly juggles multiple important themes, like civil rights conflict for Black people and queer people in the sixties, women's reproductive rights, and colorism. Wow I'm just stunned by this book.
Notes:
1. content notes: racism, racial violence, white supremacy, KKK, N-word, animal cruelty (reference to), anti-queer religious statements, pregnancy, abortion, marriage of convenience
Thank you to author Mia McKenzie, Random House, and NetGalley for an accessible digital arc of THESE HEATHENS. All views are mine.