Can the Real JR Stand Up, Please?
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This is a story of survival, resurgence, and what it means to be bigger than where you come from. With themes of friendship, coming-of-age, family and domestic violence, survival, creativity, courage and diversity, Can the Real JR Stand Up, Please? is a warm-hearted, hopeful novel about being true to yourself and learning to be brave.
Pages: 160 pages
Publishing Date: July 2021
Dimensions: 13.5 x 21 cm
Type: Paperback
ISBN: 978-1-913680-17-6
Category: Young Adult
£10.99
17 in stock
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This is a story of survival, resurgence, and what it means to be bigger than where you come from. With themes of friendship, coming-of-age, family and domestic violence, survival, creativity, courage and diversity, Can the Real JR Stand Up, Please? is a warm-hearted, hopeful novel about being true to yourself and learning to be brave.
Pages: 160 pages
Publishing Date: July 2021
Dimensions: 13.5 x 21 cm
Type: Paperback
ISBN: 978-1-913680-17-6
Category: Young Adult
Author:
Connect with the Author:
Other Books:
Jenna’s Truth
The Lost Smile
Claire Malone Changes the World
About the Author:
Nadia L King is an Australian author of Indian and Irish descent. She is a children’s author and award-winning short story writer who believes passionately in the power of stories to make the world a better place.
Nadia’s short stories have been published in Australia and internationally. She is the winner of the 2020 Maureen Freer Literary Competition for the short story category, and in 2019 she was awarded the Stuart Hadow Short Story Prize.
Nadia is currently undertaking postgraduate studies in English and creative writing. She lives in Western Australia with her family and ever-expanding collection of books.
Praise:
This is a tight, compact and cleverly realistic story. It includes many themes such as family violence, friendship/love, insecurity, creativity and survival. Family violence is described very realistically and demonstrates the frustrating powerlessness of bystanders. The main character is authentic and sympathetic. The writing is economical, dispensing with unnecessary detail thus producing a succinct and easily accessible, albeit confronting story which packs power. Despite the seriousness of the problems explored, the characters ultimately embark on their adult life with a feeling of hope, making this a story of optimism and courage.
Comment by the Judges of The CBCA 2022 Notable Books
I have a confession to make. I judged this book by its cover, and honestly started reading not expecting much from it. Then I packed it away while I was getting ready for a move, and forgot all about it until now.
And, of course the lesson here is that you should never judge a book by its cover.
Jake is 17 years old, and his father treats his wife and Jake like his punching bags. Both Jake and his mother are trapped in the situation, powerless to stop him.
He has two bright spots in his life: his manga art and hanging out with his best friend, Phee, a headstrong, determined young woman but Jake has a vision of her in his head he can’t quite see past.
So, that’s Jake in a nutshell in the last year of school, before Phee’s mother shows him an opportunity he never thought he would have: applying for a scholarship to study how to be a manga artist. It’s everything he wants and hopes for, but more than anything, it’s his escape.
The blurb also mentions magical realism, and that comes in the form of Baba Ami, his dog and Takehiko, his anime hero. Jake is the only one who can hear Baba Ami talk, and she’s his lifeline in a world where he has to endure his father’s violence. Takehiko is everything he wants to be: brave, a role model for friendship, and most of all Takehiko knows who he is; Jake is still figuring out who he is for himself.
Two things happen in Jake’s life that throw his life off kilter: Phee kisses him unexpectedly and someone he considered a kindred spirit, a local graffiti artist, Clay, reports him to the police. Jake is arrested, and thrown out of home, but it’s Phee and her mums who come to his rescue.
More than anything though, this is Jake’s journey for himself and his mother, standing up against the violence his father has brought into their house.
Can the Real JR Stand Up, Please, is a thoughtful and thought provoking exploration of domestic violence. It takes readers into the life of someone who is enduring this sort of home life, showing that even if everything may seem okay on the surface, reality may be very different. It’s ultimately hopeful resolution may offer possibilities to readers who connect with its themes.
Reviewed by Verushka Byrow - The Children's Book Council of Australia
This actually made me cry, and that’s a good thing! I love the ending so much!
Ariel, 15 years
The novel is lovely, …and there is something of the rebel — if not in JR, yet — in the narrator or the way the story exposes some things not often treated as a theme or central idea.
-Michele Drouart, Editor and Author
Despite being an emotional person and an avid reader, it’s rare that I’m moved to tears by a book. But this book… oh my god this book! It had me in tears by the end and I was so emotionally attached to JR and his story. He’s an incredibly sweet and talented kid with a horrible home life, but his bravery - one of the big themes of this novel - is astounding and I can’t believe how proud of him I am. At only 150 pages, it’s not a huge read but it does pack a huge punch and I would have gladly read on for hundreds more pages. The content is very heavy at times but I think it’s handled very well.
-Bianca Breen, Goodreads Reviewer
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