Reviews tagging 'Bullying'

Skin by Kerry Andrew

3 reviews

orlagal's review

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challenging dark emotional mysterious reflective sad tense slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.0


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megelizabeth's review against another edition

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challenging dark emotional reflective sad slow-paced

4.0

"The year didn’t just change, a quick click of digits, the world cracking apart. It was a slow bleeding. One thing into another."

This is such an impressive book. The writing style and the storytelling are incredibly clever and the atmosphere is ridiculously strong throughout. It's a truly immersive, captivating story that creeps up on you and then never quite lets you go. It's also the perfect combination of completely heartbreaking and yet also so full of heart.

This is a story that is quiet but devastating and that just packs such a perfect punch. I really appreciated both the predominant themes around family and identity and loss, and also the more subtle (only just) historical nods to the AIDS crisis and the Troubles.

The only criticism I really have isn't really the author's fault, which is that I found the blurb to be quite misleading. As a result slightly disappointed by some of the sections focusing on Matty's childhood and teenage years and time spent at Hampstead, as I expected there to be more of a 'found family' feel and this didn't really come through for me. Overall, though, I still had a great reading experience and got a lot out of this book, so I'd highly recommend if you're even remotely intrigued!

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james1star's review against another edition

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emotional reflective tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

4.5

I really enjoyed this book and desperately want to check out Andrew again as I believe they’re a potential 5 star author. This was great and I’d totally recommend giving it a read. 

Skin is split into two parts (and an epilogue, not really three like the blurb suggests), the first in 1985 where we meet Matty, our mc, just after their (I will use this pronoun throughout) dad Joe has gone missing. They live in Golders Green and Joe was known to frequent the local swimming ponds in Hampstead Heath so Matty visits trying to find answers. It’s here they forge a love for the water and swimming which continues throughout the book - the beauty and freedom but also the danger and power of it. Matty also meets Nicks and they begin a kind of friendship, accompanied by other swimmers and they start to learn more about who/what Joe might’ve been, the world and what the future is set out to have in store as the summer ends and Matty will start secondary school. The relationship with their Italian mother is explored and the way she delves into a breakdown of sorts with lots of tensions at home. I really enjoyed this section for the fact I know many of the places mentioned and the geography so I could see where things were taking place easily in my mind. 

The second section is in 1999 with Matty travelling through Ireland looking for new information in their father’s homeland. They go swimming in many lochs documenting them and the love of nature is very much apparent. Soon though a snap decision places them in a dire situation and the way this exploration of ‘wrong place, wrong time’ fallout is done was so great. It’s the quickness and how it all could’ve happened different I found Andrew portrayed amazingly. A little before, the (non direct given I read the audiobook but I think it’s kinda word-for-word) quote from Matty  ‘they always want to talk’ made me instantly know something was going to happen. What ensues I won’t mention but it just involves the afterwords of this encounter. 

I found the writing to be really nice, not only is it well written but there’s a craft too in the way nature and conservations are told that I loved. The book can be a little confusing at times too but as you go along, things click into place and you’re like ‘ohh I get it now’ which I found very clever. I also really liked how the exploration of Matty’s gender and sexuality are there but it’s in no way the focus. I did feel things could’ve been more cemented for the reader and the way some things fitted into place were a little questionable but on the whole a very decent read. 

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