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FENCE by Sarah Rees  Brennan

FENCE

Striking Distance

by Sarah Rees Brennan ; illustrated by Johanna The Mad

Pub Date: Sept. 29th, 2020
ISBN: 978-0-316-45667-8
Publisher: Little, Brown

Fencers face a challenge from their coach—learning to work as a team—in this novelized continuation of a sports romance comic series.

Kings Row, once underdogs despite being from an elite Connecticut boarding school with a long history of fencing, have won their first match of the year. Despite their potential, they are failing at bonding as a team. Nationally ranked prodigy Seiji doesn’t know the first thing about making friends. His roommate, Nicholas, a White scholarship student, feels like an outsider surrounded by his wealthy classmates. White playboy Aiden couldn’t care less about anyone on the team except their captain, Harvard, who (according to their coach) needs to learn to prioritize himself once in a while. In the midst of their teamwork training, Harvard awakens to his sexuality, and Aiden battles jealousy to preserve their friendship. Although the romantic subplot includes a contrived scenario of dating lessons, the tension between Harvard and Aiden adds urgency to the story. The queer-affirming bubble of Kings Row drifts between fluffy escapism and realism: While the world imagines a place without hate for queer people, it withholds the same treatment for other differences. Harvard, who is Black, and Seiji, who is Japanese, remark on their experiences with racism. Bullies harass Nicholas for his socio-economic status. After a high-intensity buildup, readers may wish for a clearer resolution of the central romantic drama.

Fans of C.S. Pacat’s graphic series Fence may wish to reenter this world in novel form.

(Romance. 14-18)