A ragtag group of Wisconsin paperboys grapples with fear and friendship during an ill-fated excursion one night in 1987.
You can draw a perfectly straight line through 1980s-themed supernatural horror like The Goonies and Stranger Things to contemporary novels like Jason Rekulak’s The Impossible Fortress and Edgar Cantero’s Meddling Kids to this novel’s closest analogue, Brian K. Vaughan’s influential graphic novel series, Paper Girls. Where the girls were navigating weirdness like time travel and alternate dimensions, Kois drops his six tweenage monsters into a neighborhood full of real ones. Lured by Kevin, their scumbag newspaper delivery manager, into canvassing an unfamiliar neighborhood to sell subscriptions to the Milwaukee Sentinel, the kids eagerly attack their mission for the promise of a Burger King dinner and a little extra pocket money. Bitching about his ex and generally a miserable SOB, Kevin is soon off the board, waylaid by a mysterious siren in the local dive bar. Thoughtful and observant Sigmone, one of his school’s only Black kids, teams up with rich kid Joel, only to discover his long-lost grandfather leading a gang of neighborhood enforcers. Nursing a wicked crush on his classmate Heather, hopeless romantic Mark teams up with his rule-abiding pal Ryan, only for a stray gingerbread treat to lead them both astray for quite a while. Fortunately, budding grifter and self-described hustler Business Al and his new partner, Nishu, have their wits about them when they’re held up by an unusual extortionist who demands payment for passage, turning the tables on him. Delightfully immature and authentic dialogue, a refreshing lack of cynicism, and some genuinely unnerving threats all help elevate what could have been a slapdash assembly of tropes to an engaging and eerie adventure—as advertised.
A fractured fairy tale, as much about getting out with your skin intact as the friends we made along the way.