cover image Things We Have in Common

Things We Have in Common

Tasha Kavanagh. Mira, $26.99 (304p) ISBN 978-0-7783-2685-4

Yasmin is an overweight 15-year-old with no friends, missing her dad who died five years ago, stuck living with her mom and her loser judgmental stepfather, Gary, in a nondescript U.K. suburb, and obsessed with Alice Taylor, one of the popular girls in her class who barely gives her the time of day. But from the get-go, the wildly clever Kavanagh, in her spectacular adult-novel debut, launches a new obsession for Yasmin: a strange man standing at the edge of the school property who appears to be as drawn to Alice as she is. Yasmin is certain he is going to kidnap Alice (she even Googles “how to spot a pedophile”), and that notion inspires a series of fantasies in which Yasmin heroically saves Alice and they become best friends forever. The canny Yasmin insinuates herself into the stalker’s life so that she can identify him to the police if he goes through with the horrible deed. Things get complicated when he turns out to be the first person in her adolescent life who doesn’t mock her or treat her with disdain, and they get even more complicated when Alice actually disappears, and Yasmin’s stepfather is a suspect. The ensuing events and the stunning conclusion underscore the author’s searing insight into teenage behavior and the desperation for connection. (Jan.)