Books Magazine

Danika Reviews My Year Zero by Rachel Gold

Posted on the 18 March 2016 by Lesbrary @lesbrary
Danika reviews My Year Zero by Rachel Gold When I met Blake, I had no idea that she would destroy my life.

My Year Zero makes for a great addition to the lesbian YA genre. In a lot of ways, it's a refreshing change from the standard lesbian YA narrative. Lauren is a Jewish teenager with an emotionally neglectful father. One of the other major characters is bipolar. Add into this mix an unhealthy first relationship, a group storytelling/roleplaying website, and an enthusiasm for math, and you have a lot more to juggle than most queer YA I've read attempt to do.

This also isn't a coming out story. The first page includes the paragraph

A few months after I turned sixteen, I figured it was time to have sex. Almost half of American teens have had sex before they turn seventeen, so if I could get laid this year I'd be a little ahead of the curve. And I'm talking girl-girl sex here, so it wasn't like I had to worry about getting her pregnant.

One of my favourite parts about My Year Zero is the strong voice. Lauren sounds like a teenager. She's funny, relateable, and sometimes in way over her head. I was hooked from that first sentence, and the more I learned about Blake, the more intrigued I was. As a personal preference, I loved the focus on the collaborative storytelling group that Lauren joins. I was part of a similar community when I was a teenager (though it was more roleplaying than original storytelling), and it was partly how I began my first relationship.

Like I thought My Year Zero managed to weave all these aspects together smoothly. This actually reminds me of the requests I often see on tumblr about the kinds of stories they want to be reading. It's intersectional and doesn't just focus on coming out. I can't speak to the portrayal of mental health or Lauren's Jewish identity-though I have seen some criticism of both from reviewers who are better informed-but on the whole I think this is a very necessary addition to the canon. In fact, Rachel Gold seems to be doing now what Julie Anne Peters did ten years ago: pushing LGBT representation in YA forward, one book at a time, making room for even more representative and authentic stories to come.

This entry was posted in Lesbrary Reviews and tagged Rachel Gold, YA, young adult. Bookmark the permalink.


Back to Featured Articles on Logo Paperblog