The Real Riley Mayes
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- $8.99
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- $8.99
Publisher Description
A Stonewall Book Award Honor * A Sid Fleishman Humor Award Honor
Funny and full of heart, this debut graphic novel is a story about friendship, identity, and embracing all the parts of yourself that make you special.
Fifth grade is just not Riley’s vibe. Everyone else is squaded up—except Riley. Her best friend moved away. All she wants to do is draw, and her grades show it.
One thing that makes her happy is her favorite comedian, Joy Powers. Riley loves to watch her old shows and has memorized her best jokes. So when the class is assigned to write letters to people they admire, of course Riley’s picking Joy Powers!
Things start to look up when a classmate, Cate, offers to help Riley with the letter, and a new kid, Aaron, actually seems to get her weird sense of humor. But when mean girl Whitney spreads a rumor about her, things begin to click into place for Riley. Her curiosity about Aaron’s two dads and her celebrity crush on Joy Powers suddenly make more sense.
Readers will respond to Riley’s journey of self-discovery and will recognize themselves in this character who is less than perfect but trying her best. And creative kids will recognize themselves in her love of art and drawing.
While often funny and light, Riley’s exploration of what it feels to be an outsider and how hard it can be to make a friend break your heart in the best way. And with all of Riley’s hijinks and missteps, this story is laugh-out-loud funny from start to finish.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
An aspiring artist grapples with gender-related expectations and burgeoning sexuality in Elliott's warm debut. Riley Mayes, who presents as white, thinks that fifth grade "isn't my kinda vibe": her school has laid off its art teacher, the classmate who found her funny has moved away, and the other kids seem to have "squaded-up." But following her mother's suggestion to find people who get her, Riley befriends new kid and comics enthusiast Aaron, who has two dads and is portrayed with brown skin, and cued-white cat fanatic Cate, who asks Riley to illustrate her original feline-focused story. As Riley works to earn local art lessons, maintaining her grades and avoiding notes home, a new hairstyle prompts a schoolmate to call her "lesbo," and she realizes that her fixation on a female comic is actually a crush. Elliott leans into Riley's anxieties around queerness: "If a person is gay... will they still have friends?" she wonders, even while encountering a positive model in Aaron's dads. In fine lines and citrus hues, Elliott renders a sunny external world that juxtaposes Riley's internal worries and confusion in a story of self-discovery that's messy and full of heart. Ages 8–12.