Blog Archives
Finding Phoebe by Gavin Extence – Blog Tour Book Review

About the Book
Phoebe is autistic. She prefers to stay in her comfort zone: walking her dog, writing fantasy fiction, surviving school with as few incidents as possible.
When her best (and only) friend rebels and gets a secret boyfriend, Phoebe reluctantly agrees to cover for her. Before long, Phoebe’s dealing with all sorts of things she’d rather not, like deception, fashionable jackets, and the bewildering politics of the school chess club. Breaking the rules has never been Phoebe’s thing, but as events take a seriously unexpected turn, she realises there’s more to her than she ever imagined . . .
(Please note at the end of my review I have added some trigger warnings but some may be considered spoilers)
About the Author
Gavin Extence was born in 1982 and grew up in the interestingly named village of Swineshead, Lincolnshire. From the ages of 5-11, he enjoyed a brief but illustrious career as a chess player, winning numerous national championships and travelling to Moscow and St Petersburg to pit his wits against the finest young minds in Russia. He won only one game.
Gavin is currently working on his second novel. When he is not writing, he enjoys cooking, amateur astronomy and going to Alton Towers.
Twitter: http://twitter.com/gavinextence
What I Thought
First up I loved Phoebe’s voice. Her character practically leaps off the page, after slowly and methodically planning the leap of course!
Phoebe is autistic and in the author’s acknowledgment at the end he tells us he wrote this book for his autistic daughter. I would love to read some reviews from #actuallyautistic readers to see how they viewed the representation but I felt it was nuanced and respectful.
Phoebe is a very forthright character and I really enjoyed how we see her using tools at home to self regulate and how she already knows and understands both her autism and her own needs. She likes a routine, she likes things to be logical and she doesn’t always understand what people mean but that doesn’t make her naive or inept, it makes her thoughtful and analytical. She knows when she doesn’t get something and this does become a source of concern for her at times.
Phoebe also knows her own mind, she knows what she wants out of life but she does go through a slightly misguided period of creating her own social improvement plan. Sometimes the plan helps, sometimes it doesn’t, but it does introduce chess club to her life so she doesn’t just have to play against her phone (although I think she finds that preferable to be honest).
Of course there are a few arguments between her and her best friend Bethany when Phoebe doesn’t catch on as quickly to what is going on with Bethany (they are teenage girls after all). But on the whole I think Bethany is an example of a good friend who accepts and respects Phoebe for who she is, as Phoebe does in return for her. It feels like very much a reciprocal friendship.
Phoebe’s relationship with Bethany is one of the stable things in her routine – that is until Will comes along to rock the boat. And boy does he make the sea choppy. There was a scene toward the end that surprised me at the time although when thinking back the author had added subtle cues to this development. I also both did and didn’t enjoy Phoebe’s interactions with Bethany’s very religious parents and admire her later interactions with them in trying to be a good friend and make Bethany’s life better.
Phoebe narrates the book to her mum who has died, and who also had ME while she was alive, and this adds a nuance that Phoebe is also facing all these challenges growing up without a female figure to guide her, although she still has a very supportive dad. During the book Phoebe and her friend are in the last year of GCSEs and have to do work experience. Phoebe wants to be a writer and manages to arrange some time with the small town’s reclusive poet. There was definitely some humour in these scenes and although used as a mentor figure, Mrs Frost (also autistic coded) is most definitely not a mother figure. I also enjoyed all the bookish references and it turn out I have very similar taste to Phoebe and have added a couple more books to my TBR as a result.
Boys aren’t the only thing that disrupt Phoebe’s worldview and I’m glad that this meant we got a chance to meet her grandmother as early mentions of her had me liking her and wanting to know more about their relationship.
“Furthermore, it turned out that I could cope in a crisis, just as long as it wasn’t my crisis.”
I related to this quote so hard although I think Phoebe actually handled her own crisis better than I would – I would just sit in a corner and sob even at nearly 45!
The setting of the book was so interesting too. They live in a small island town of 160 which sometimes gets cut off with the tide from where they go to school and so Bethany and Phoebe board together at the school part time. No Malory Towers style midnight feasts here although a late night sneaking out does occur.
Overall I found this thought provoking, warm and a wonderful exploration of teen female friendship. If you read this I think that like Bethany, you’d come to realise – who wouldn’t want a Phoebe in their corner?
Trigger Warnings Below (May Be Considered Spoilers)
Teen Pregnancy and Abortion, Death of a Parent, Cancer, Ableism, Homophobia, Extra marital affair, Religious Trauma, Loss of Faith
Huge thanks to Bee at Kaleidoscopic Tours and the Publisher Anderson Press for the gifted copy. This review is my honest opinion. Do check out the rest of the tour stops to see what everyone else thought too.


Celebrate Valentine’s Day at the Heartbreak Café – Re-release of the 80s series by Janet Quin-Harkin

Happy Valentine’s Day everyone – I hope today sees you having time to read a favourite book or three.
Today also marks the re-release of the Heartbreak Cafe series by Janet Quin-Harkin which follows teen Debbie Lesley as she takes on a new job, and a new way of living, after her parent’s divorce.
I was gifted book one – No Experience Required – for review and I’m so glad I was. As a 42 year old – I may now be closer to Debbie’s parents’ age but these books were around when I was nearer Debbie’s age – or perhaps a little bit before because sadly they are not ones I remember reading. I was busy reading Sweet Valley High in the early 90s instead.
About No Experience Required
Deborah Lesley’s comfortable life in Northern California is suddenly turned upside down. Her family is breaking up, there’s no longer the family home she grew up in and she finds herself having to grow up, and find a job at the popular beach hangout Heartbreak Café.
Life is never dull at the Heartbreak Café and the dram for Deborah Lesly only continues once she starts work. Theres Joe Garbarini for start who runs the café when he’s not at school and whose sarcasm is almost enough to make Debbie walk out of a job she very much needs. But she’d ready to prove Joe wrong and stick to the job, she needs the money after all.
About the Author
Janet Quin-Harkin first found success as a picture book writer, winning several awards. She was then asked to write a teenage series and Heartbreak Café was born! The first in the series No Experience Required was an instant success when it was originally published in the eighties. By the time the third book came out she was selling half a million copies. Since then Janet has gone on to become a New York Times bestseller. Writing under the pen name Why Bowen, she is the author of the historical Molly Murphy and Rpyal Spyness mystery series. She has won the Agatha Best Novel Award and was nominated for the Edgar Best Novel. Janet is British and divides her time between California and Arizona.
You can visit her website at www.rhysbowen.com
What I Thought
This at once took me back to my childhood but in an odd way also seems like it could have been written today. Only a few things firmly placed it in the past, the lack of mobile phones, and turns of phrase such as neat. It’s such an easy read and reminded me of a time when I would read multiple books in a day (at a little over 200 pages it is very easily digestible). One thing I wasn’t so keen on was the slight undercurrent of fatphobia and sadly I think that’s something that does still exist today. The mentions were very brief and mild but they were still present.
Main character Debbie was great to follow, her arc from spoilt rich girl to independent teen allowed plenty of room for growth and the dynamic between her and Joe, snarky and fun is what I like to read. She has insight and awareness but is still a teenager who sometimes acts before she thinks.
Debbie has her toes in two worlds – one is a country club, Harvard aspiring one with a Quarterback future lawyer boyfriend, and in the other she lives in an apartment and has a new part time job to pay to keep the car she had in the first world. But which one does she fit in? Can she belong to both?
Her parents are both present and absent in her life but I am glad they don’t disappear altogether and the angst and upset of divorce runs through this book. I couldn’t help but empathise with her mum.
There is lots of humour too – particularly when Debbie is trying to cook burgers for the first time – I definitely would not wanted to have been her first customer.
The secondary characters are intriguing and I hope they come to the fore more in later books because they definitely have their own stories to share. We definitely only scrape the surface with them in this book which centres firmly on Debbie, even Joe has more to him than we see here.
All in all this was a light, fun read and took me back to the polyester uniform of my first job (supermarket rather than café). If you like YA/teen contemporary then I’d definitely recommend picking these up.
The Heartbreak Café series is published by Ellfie Books the YA and Teen Imprint of the publishers Ellingstar Media.
Book 1 – No Experience Required
Book 2 – The Main Attraction
Book 3 – At Your Service
Book 4 – Catch of the Day
Book 5 – Love to Go
Book 6 – Just Desserts
In this hit eighties series about teen life in northern California, themes of friendship, work, family, divorce, and love are ever present. From movie makers coming to town and surprising romances, the Heartbreak Café series will transport you to a retro California, full of sun, surf, and heartbreak.
It’s author says “I always had a special place in my heart for Heartbreak Café. It seems very real to me (actually it was modelled on a real café in Capitola CA) and I saw it as a place that was where paths crossed and people came out changed. In spite of its humour it had serious underpinnings and a message that is timeless. That’s why I’m so thrilled to see it back in print.”






