Book Review: In Bloom, by Liz Allan    

Image belongs to Simon & Schuster.

Title: In Bloom
Author: Liz Allan     
Genre: Fiction   
Rating: 3 out of 5

It’s the mid-nineties, and in the small, shitty coastal town of Vincent, four girls – each hailing from single-mother, multi-sibling families, form a band. Friends since they were children, they consider themselves ‘forgettable girls’ – poor, not particularly clever, distracted at school, disengaged and disillusioned from the other kids, and desperate to escape the fates of their mothers, who seem locked into a life of minimum-wage jobs and domestic drudgery. Winning the Battle of the Bands is their ticket out – they might not have talent, but they can play three chords and scream until their vocal folds burst out of their throats – and nobody wants it more than them.

But when lead singer Lily Lucid quits, and accuses their idolized music teacher of sexual assault, the three remaining girls are left with nothing. They’ll do anything to keep their dream alive, even if it means sacrificing school, Lily and their mothers. But how far out of control can they spin before there’s no turning back?

Most of this book is in a stream-of-consciousness style that feels more than a bit manic. The chapters are quick and frantic, so the story moves quickly, but I found the characters—the three main ones who are treated as a group whole without the reader even knowing their individual names until the last few chapters—to be fairly childish and annoying. Yes, they’re fourteen, but they acted several years younger than that. If this hadn’t been such a quick read, I would have DNFed it. The near-constant Nirvana obsession was enough to put me over the edge.

Liz Allan is from Australia and lives in the UK. In Bloom is her debut novel.

(Galley courtesy of Simon & Schuster in exchange for an honest review.)

 

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