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What's Not Mine

A Novel

Audiobook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 6 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 6 weeks

"Nora Decter has written a wrenching, knowing, and wry novel about coming of age into a rough world." — Meg Wolitzer, author of The Female Persuasion

For fans of Miriam Toews, an absorbing, darkly funny story of family, addiction, and survival

The summer Bria Powers turns 16 is sinister. Waves of insects plague her hometown of Beauchamp, where fentanyl has recently infiltrated the drug stream. Forest fires muddy the normally wide-open skies, and everything smells like a barbecue all the time. It's also the summer Bria goes from having saved a life to ruining her own.

Since her drug-dealing father disappeared and his girlfriend overdosed, Bria has lived with her aunt Tash and best friend/cousin Ains. By day, Bria and Ains babysit Ains's younger siblings and sling fast food at Burger Shack. But at night, Bria has her own secret world, sneaking out to see Someboy, an older guy who captivates her sometimes. Other times, he angers-insults-upends her, and that has a certain charm too.

But trouble comes for Beauchamp and for Bria in the form of bears that wander into town, dick pics texted from a mystery number, and a creeping dependence on what Bria should hate most of all.

Steeped in tragicomedy and written in starkly observed prose, What's Not Mine explores inheritance, addiction, and survival when the odds are against you.

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    • Library Journal

      March 1, 2024

      As her 16th birthday approaches, Bria finds herself overwhelmed. Drugs play a major role in her small Manitoba town: her mother is addicted to them and left when Bria was four; her father is in jail for drug-dealing; his girlfriend overdosed on fentanyl. Bria finds it difficult to resist drugs' allure as well, and, adding to her spiral, she is receiving pornographic images from an anonymous sender via cellphone. While staying with her aunt, Bria babysits her cousins, works at the Burger Shack, and sneaks out of the apartment to have an affair with a much older, disreputable man. Filtering events through Bria's voice, Decter's (How Far We Go and How Fast) adult debut illustrates the reality of living with drugs as the main source of recreation and economic viability. Occasionally vocabulary such as "verisimilitude" slips into the story, which seems out of character in the first-person narration of a girl who's not interested in school, but Decter shines most when she describes the heat, smoke, bears, and insect-laden trees of a Manitoba summer. VERDICT With humor and a lack of sentimentality, Decter portrays an adolescent girl and her town facing serious environmental and social challenges.--Jacqueline Snider

      Copyright 2024 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      March 15, 2024
      Bria is 15 and surviving the summer as best she can. With her dad away to address drug charges, and his girlfriend, Steph, in treatment after a fentanyl overdose, Bria lives with her Aunt Tash, Tash's boyfriend, and her cousins. Bria's closest friend is her cousin Ains, though they keep secrets from each other and fight silently during their shifts together at the Burger Shack. But Ains doesn't tell Tash when Bria sneaks out at night to see her much-older boyfriend, Someboy, or when she comes home drunk or high. And Bria doesn't tell Ains about the pills she has been taking to numb herself or the dick pics that some random man keeps texting her. Throughout the tumultuous summer, Bria tries to outrun the absences and legacies that define her young life. With a fine attunement to the unique challenges of being a teenage girl, Decter writes in the compelling voice of a young woman veering towards an edge she can sense but can't seem to avoid.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      June 14, 2024

      Coming up on her 16th birthday, Bria Powers is the definition of world-weary. It's summer; Bria should be busy being a teen. In a way, she is--babysitting her cousins by the pool, sneaking in the house late at night, flipping burgers for pocket money. But Bria is also visiting bars with her boyfriend, Someboy, popping pills, and trying to figure out which anonymous adult man is sending her unsolicited naked photos. She didn't ask for any of this, but she can't seem to get away from any of it either. This novel is a grim one, especially as readers learn more about the impact drugs have had on Bria's life, but there is also a lot of care and gritty humor to be found as well. Narrator Billie Baird lends a deep sardonic wit to the telling of Bria's story. Her voice fits just right in the adult debut by Decter (author of the YA novel How Far We Go and How Fast). VERDICT Contemporary fiction readers looking for equal parts grit and heart will enjoy this one.--Katy Hite

      Copyright 2024 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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