The Queen of Junk Island
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- $18.99
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- $18.99
Publisher Description
From debut author Alexandra Mae Jones comes a compelling, nuanced exploration of bi identity and body image with a ghostly backdrop—perfect for fans of Nina Lacour.
Still reeling from a recent trauma, sixteen-year-old Dell is relieved when her mom suggests a stay at the family cabin. But the much-needed escape quickly turns into a disaster. The lake and woods are awash in trash left by a previous tenant. And worse, Dell’s mom has invited her boyfriend’s daughter to stay with them. Confident, irreverent Ivy presses all of Dell's buttons--somehow making Dell’s shame and self-consciousness feel even more acute. Yet Dell is drawn to Ivy in a way she doesn't fully understand. As Dell uncovers secrets in the wreckage of her family's past--secrets hinted at through troubling dreams and strange apparitions--Ivy leads her toward thrilling, if confusing, revelations about her sexuality and identity.
Set during a humid summer in the mid-2000s, The Queen of Junk Island simmers with the intensity of a teenage girl navigating the suffocating expectations of everyone around her.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Jones's haunting debut, set in mid-2000s Ontario, unapologetically tackles biphobia, generational trauma, misogyny, and slut-shaming. Sixteen-year-old Dell is running from a lot of things, including unresolved trauma from a sexual harassment incident, a stormy relationship with her mother, and her own pervasive thoughts that she's "messed up" for masturbating. When her mother receives word that their tenant, who had been renting their lakeside cottage, has been illegally dumping trash in the lake, the duo decide to spend their summer clearing out the detritus. What Dell assumed would be a quiet, if laborious, getaway is invaded by Dell's mother's boyfriend and his 17-year-old daughter Ivy, whom Dell is simultaneously infuriated and captivated by. The cottage clean-out also uncovers secrets about Dell's mother's past and Dell, plagued by strange apparitions of her late aunt, must navigate her burgeoning sexuality while confronting potentially uncomfortable truths about her family history. Through Dell's tumultuous mental health and equally turbulent relationships, this intensely personal and moving narrative adeptly captures the often nerve-wracking complexity of queer adolescence. A contextualizing author's note concludes. Dell is white; Ivy is of an unspecified Indigenous descent. Ages 16–up.