Tuesday, January 31, 2023

Such a Fun Age

Such a Fun Age by Kiley Reid
Read January 2023 - Zoom Reading Circle



Wow!  This was quite a story!  It was a fairly quick and easy read but drew me in the further along I got.  At first, I didn’t really ‘like’ any of the characters (except, of course, for Briar) but I grew to like Emira the best of the main characters.  


It did seem a bit heavily written in the way that EVERY SINGLE STEREOTYPE was included, but that is what gave the book its power and pop.  You couldn’t help but see yourself and mistakes you had made, others, real life situations, in so much of it.  Each character encapsulated problematic characteristics of racism...  some more overt than others. 


I read in a review of this book that it was good at depicting ‘negative space’ which means the space between what we intend to happen and the consequences of our actual actions.  That makes a lot of sense to me.  Between what someones ‘means’ and and how it is actually ‘perceived’.  The author did a really good job of depicting that - from both perspectives and among all the characters. 


This is not a great book because I loved the characters and the resolution.  It is a really good book because it depicts so well the inner workings, thoughts and motivations of 3 different people and how their interactions fuel it all. 



Lines I highlighted in this book...


A text message from Laney was waiting on her phone. Is it okay if Ramona and Suzanne swing by with me tonight? They have girls too and they’re completely lovely. Feel free to tell me no if you just want one-on-one time! Alix rubbed the back of her neck and thought, Jesus fucking Christ. With both hands she texted, The more the merrier!


It’s like eating everything on your plate ’cause you think someone else won’t go hungry if you don’t. You’re not helping anyone but yourself.


“It completely fetishizes black people in a terrible way,” Tamra went on. “It makes it seem like we’re all the same, as if we can’t contain multitudes of personalities and traits and differences. And people like that think that it says something good about them, that they’re so brave and unique that they would even dare to date black women. Like they’re some kind of martyr.”


This was a video about racism that you could watch without seeing any blood or ruining the rest of your day.


This was a video about racism that you could watch without seeing any blood or ruining the rest of your day.


Believing that Kelley was the starting point of her adversity would always be easier than believing she’d simply slipped through an unlucky crack. This choice to believe otherwise, to pretend there weren’t coffee-colored letters pressed into her chest, would keep her close to him, even if staying close to Kelley meant holding a grudge for something that he never did.


I gave this book 4 stars out of 5.  Zoom Reading Circle gave it 3.8.  






Spoiler alert for what I wrote below... don't read if you don't want to see some of the pertinent plot points mentioned.  

I felt so sorry for Briar and wanted to yell at Alix to wake up and do better!  Kelley creeped me out... from the very beginning!  I felt he was quite unfair to Alix in his characterization of her in high school and her treatment of the black caregiver hired by her parents (Carlotta??)  I think Alix was not wrong to call the police on the high school kids who invaded her home without permission!  I mean, seriously!  BUT, Alix was flat out terrifying with some of her thoughts and actions toward Emira and Kelley!  She was way too obsessed with each of them in different ways and it was all tied together by her complete narcissism.  What a character!  And when she walked out and left baby Catherine alone at home I was literally screaming at the book!  However, did I think she ‘deserved’ what happened to her at the end with the live interview and Emira ‘breaking up with her’ like Kelley had?  Not really.  That was a bit over the top.  But I could understand it.  

Emira was a likable character mostly - I liked her more and more as the book went on.  She was struggling to find herself and wanted to ‘adult’ while all her friends were moving on.  That is a hard thing.  I can get that.  She truly loved and cared for Briar and was that poor little girls best lifeline.  To me the greatest tragedy of the book is that Briar would no longer have Emira in her life (and vice versa).  Emira is someone you do root for and hope she will be ‘okay’.  

Kelley weirded me out.  That scene on the subway where he talks about Emira being his girlfriend and they have this game where they pretend to not be was strange. He is a control freak who is out to prove how cool and ‘woke’ he is.  At the expense of other humans!  Creepy.  He may have grown into believing his schtick by his later years, but he was a weirdo for sure.  

Peter was nice but not really a focus.  Hope he loves Briar.  

Key points from other reviews 
Alix - entitlement and saviorism.  But also, I would say, narcissism.  And a bit of a send up of a rich white ‘woke’ woman from New York (probably quite accurate...)  Incredible at the end that we discover that Kelley hadn’t actually shared that awful letter but that she had decided to ‘continue with the narrative that best helped her’ for all those years, including in a face to face confrontation with Kelley himself?  Wow!  Nutso!  Agree with another review I read that said they would have liked to read something from the perspective of another character - Zara.  True! 


Author Kiley Reid on The Daily Show



I thought this was a good review of the book. 



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