Between The Flags

Author(s): Rachel Fenton

Young Adult | Social Issues & Relationships | Aotearoa New Zealand | Read our reviews! | Cuba Press

What if the worst thing that could ever happen to you had already happened, but you didn't realise? Like your brain couldn't handle it, so you turned it into a comic. Then closed it.


Fourteen-year-old trainee lifeguard Mandy Malham has wanted to beat Jen in the surf lifesaving championships at Soldier Tree Bay ever since Jen bullied her in primary school, but to do that, Mandy comes to realise that first she must rescue herself.


'Between the Flags' is a story of losing and finding yourself when some days it feels like the only friend you have is the pen in your hand. The first YA novel from author and graphic artist Rachel J Fenton.

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STELLA'S REVIEW:
A girl, a drowning, a rescue, a comic. Rachel Fenton’s teen novel explores the difficult territory of trauma with tenderness, humour, and humility. She cleverly leads you into what seems to be a story about striving, peer pressure, competitive sports, and being a teenager in today’s world which presents a plethora of ‘big issues’ to young people (climate change, racism, class, body image). And it is all these things, but it is at its core a gripping and emotional observation of grief and the many faces this can wear. At first, you are unaware that the main character is carrying or, more precisely, hiding a burden that is too big to be named. Mandy is a member of the Surf Lifesavers' club at Soldier Tree Bay, North Shore, and the book begins with her, face down in the sand, one of six other fourteen-year-olds waiting to compete in the race for the flag. Here you are in Mandy’s head, having the action described in blow-by-blow picture frames. A perfect comic strip in the making. This is disconcerting and intriguing, visually (through the text) pulling you into this place, this moment. It also, subtly, tells you something about Mandy. She has this coping mechanism for a reason. But what won’t be revealed for quite a few chapters. She’s an outsider, partly pushed away by the other girls, partly holding herself separate. At school she’s stopped speaking, ostracising herself further, and she’s falling behind, and not through a lack of ability. Casey, her little brother, loves her stories and wants to see what she’s drawing, but he’s not always around. And her big brother, Dan, has long flown the coop. Mandy’s loneliness drives her further into herself. And to make it worse, it looks like her Mum and Dad are breaking up. She’s angry with both of them. And she’s fed up with the nasty Jen and her friends, and the boys, especially Oliver, who are always making fun of her. Why couldn’t she be more like Mako, instead of nicknamed Orca? Seeing the psychologist helps, but the turning point is when she accidentally hands in her comic instead of her English essay. Mako may be the comic book hero but Mandy Malham is the unforgettable character of this novel as she shows us how we do and don’t cope with difficult situations and how we can overcome trauma and move forward. Between the Flags is a powerful, affecting novel with a comic strip at its centre.


 

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Product Information

‘At the heart of Between the Flags is a strong emotional riptide that quickly takes hold and pulls you into deep dark waters. But never fear, we’re in safe hands: Rachel Fenton is here to teach us how to swim. This is a powerful, generous, healing book, full of life, with a central character you will never forget.’
— Dylan Horrocks, author of Hicksville

 Rachel J Fenton is a writer, graphic artist and anthologist, living in Oamaru and a curator at the Janet Frame House. She has won fiction competitions in Aotearoa and overseas, including the Laura Solomon NZSA Cuba Press Prize 2022, was shortlisted for The Royal Society of New Zealand Manhire Prize and is a Pushcart nominee. She is co-editor with Sarah Laing and Indira Neville of Three Words: An Anthology of Aotearoa/NZ Women's Comics, and as Rae Joyce, she is an award-winning graphic poet.

General Fields

  • : 9781991150837
  • : The Cuba Press
  • : AHOY!
  • : 01 August 2022
  • : 198mm x 128mm x 198mm
  • : books

Special Fields

  • : Rachel Fenton
  • : Paperback
  • : English
  • : 250
  • : YFB