This book was a gigantic lie. The summary you see connected to it? That had literally nothing to do with the novel until the very, VERY end. You're 90% done with it by the time the summary even comes into play. I felt lied to. Get ready, because there are going to be some light to medium spoilers in this review.
I had so many issues with this novel that, like one of my past reviews for a one-star rated book, I'm going to put it in number format so I don't hurt your eyes.
1. The writing style is absolutely terrible. Not only that, but it's flat-out boring. It's written in the form of letters to a judge. Sounds interesting, right? Wrong. Literally EVERY SENTENCE involving conversations ends with "I said", "he said", or "she said". I'm not joking.
Example (not directly from the novel, but just an idea of what it looked like): "What?" I said. "You heard me," she said. "I don't understand," I said. "What don't you understand?" she said. "None of it," I said.
The ENTIRE FREAKING NOVEL is written like this. No description. No interesting sentence structures. No adjectives peppered into the sentences to give you an interesting mental picture. Just literal "he said, she said" sentences right in your face the entire time. I was ready to give up by chapter three.
2. All of the characters were terribly written. The "protagonists" were complete and total idiots. The "antagonists" were over-the-top cliched evil. I wanted to slap every single character at least once throughout this crap fest. Med, the main character, was the only one I could feel any slight pity for, but the sentence structure train crash I mentioned earlier made it hard for me to even like him. His kids were all dramatically different in cliched ways. His youngest, nicknamed "Fat" (that alone had me raising my eyebrows), frustrated me to no end. I understand that some people are drawn to the "bad boys" at a young age, but the progression of her life just didn't flow properly. "I love you daddy! LOL, j/k! I'm dating this loser now and you can suck it!" Just...why? Where did that come from? Was it just because she was a teenager who wanted to get back at her dad for not liking her past love interests? If so, it wasn't written clear enough to show us that.
3. So many things in this novel just didn't make sense. I get the idea the author was going for when Fat started to become unstable. Her mother obviously showed signs of being unstable, so I get that the author was trying to point out that mental instability can be genetic. Her mother literally ran their car into a fence when she found out she was pregnant with Fat. I get it. But Fat's signs of instability literally started out of nowhere. She was 15 and dated a guy who was ten years older than her. Shouldn't her father do something about that? He hated the dude, but he didn't actually do anything to stop the situation. Not only that, but shouldn't that be considered illegal?? She wasn't over 18 and she was having sex with an adult man. Nobody was going to say anything about that? On a similar note, how did Med's wife run off and not have to pay child support? She just disappeared randomly, still kept in contact with the kids (but not Med), and left Med to do everything by himself? How?! She would have had to pay child support to help raise Fat!
4. I really hated how social workers were represented here. One of my best friends is a social worker, and I felt disgusted reading about them in this novel. The author described them as heartless, conniving morons. They were doing their jobs to keep children safe. One child suffered from Shaken Baby Syndrome and the other was conceived by an adult mother who wasn't mentally right and a father who was under 18 (once again, ISN'T THIS ILLEGAL?!?!). The social workers stepped in to make sure both of these children would be kept safe. It felt like we were supposed to be on the side of the "protagonists", saying "you go, Fat! I know your dirtbag husband almost killed your first child and you're too mentally unstable to take care of your second child, but screw those social workers!" No. I refuse to look at it that way. It made me sick.
5. There was an insane amount of racist moments throughout the novel. Med having an issue with Fat dating anyone who wasn't white bothered me; and Savannah (Fat's second child) having dark skin seemed to be the only thing worth mentioning about her. It could have been written in a much better way, but it fell flat and was more insulting than interesting.
I would give this book zero stars if possible. I'm not usually the type of person to insult a novel this much, but I can't help it with this one. It was horribly written with terrible characters and an insulting representation of different cultures and social workers. Don't give this book the time of day. You would have more fun slamming your face against a door for an hour straight than you would reading this trash.