Avery Lou has given up stealing houses — now he’s meant to build them. Forced to stay with the De Lainey family until Sam’s return from juvie, Avery feels like he’s drowning. He hates that Sam chose the De Laineys instead of running away with him. And he hates working in their construction company while Vin, the thief who hurt Sam, still walks free. Avery wants revenge. Swapping the sharp-edged world of burglary and car theft for the homey chaos of big family life is a wild adjustment, and Avery’s determined to sabotage his time with the De Laineys and get locked up with Sam instead. Avery just has to stay immune to Jeremy’s charming shenanigans. Easy…sort of. But Avery’s war against Vin has brought trouble to the De Lainey door and he can’t survive this fight alone.
CG Drews is the award-winning NYT Bestselling author of Don’t Let The Forest In, Hazelthorn, and You Did Nothing Wrong. Their work has been translated into over 12 languages, was nominated for the 2020 CILIP Carnegie Medal, and won the B&N 2025 YA Book Awards, and are also Indie Next Picks and Junior Library Guild Gold Standard Selections. CG lives in Australia under a pile of unread books. Find on Instagram as @paperfury and TikTok as @cgdrews or at cgdrews.com.
*please note that books from the general market may contain content I don't necessarily recommend or endorse for my readership. Feel free to message me if you have any questions regarding a book on my shelves!
This book deserves all the stars!! How do I even begin to describe what this book made me feel - I was broken, put back together, broken again and hugged. C.G. Drews not only wrote a story that's THE PERFECT example of found family, but the characters are my heart!! I want more of them, I want a daily dose of De Laineys. The Kings of Nowhere is the sequel to The Boy Who Steals Houses and is exclusively available on the author's Patreon. Please do subscribe as the author has shared short stories about the characters. These stories are the gems in the crown that is The Kings of Nowhere. Be sure to read The Boy Who Steals Houses first, in order to get to know these characters fully.
The writing is absolutely beautiful, the characters are loveable and the story is memorable. The way people feel about Heartstopper is the way I feel about these characters. I'm looking forward to the third and final book in the series, I don't think I'll ever be ready to say goodbye to Sam and Avery. I don't want to go into detail about this book to avoid spoilers, but this is Avery's story. Sam is currently in juvie and we get to see how Avery handles the De Laineys and how they take his broken pieces and fit them together with theirs.
I'm forever grateful to the author for writing this story, I have never come across two brothers I love more. With all the different emotions, the heartbreaking and happy moments, this is a story that you won't forget. I highly recommend reading this! *Be sure to check the TW.
Endless thank you to the author for gifting me a copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.
All the stars in the fucking galaxy wouldn't even begin to be enough. The universe is supposedly still expanding (what into? Who knows, but the official lore of the universe says that it is and who am I to question that), yet no matter how much it does so, it'll never have enough celestial bodies in it to give this masterpiece a proper rating.
"The Kings of Nowhere" picks up right where "The Boy Who Steals Houses" left off, but from a different perspective; Avery Lou's, Sammy's brother who finds himself without his tether and living with the family Sam has come to love as his own. As he tries to navigate living with a found family that's Sam's, not his, without his brother, Avery starts realising that maybe, perhaps, there's room for him too in other people's hearts.
So. As I was saying. Not enough celestial bodies. This book grabs your heart and jumps back and forth between beating it up in a dirty alley wearing rings on all its fingers, and cuddling on the couch with a pint of ice cream while watching the fire. One of the things about C.G. Drews' writing that fascinates me the most is the way she makes writing look easy. She grabs a stream of emotion and weaves into a neat little paragraph, and even when it's broken and messy, you just know that it's supposed to be there and look like that and give you these exact feelings in this exact way, and honestly I don't even know how to describe how brutally underrated her work is. Her prose is raw, brutal, unapologetic, and yet sweet and smooth, and by god, it's a literal crime that some people out there haven't read her books yet.
One of the main focuses in this book is Avery's experience as an autistic boy that's been in and out of trouble with the system during most of his life. The book does not flinch as it depicts the many ways in which ableism hurts autistic people, although you might as you try to keep your lunch down, and it does not apologise either. Just like the Lou brothers, this story hasn't been made to bury its head in the sand. Instead it's a brutally honest, raw, and heartfelt outcry at the system, at a neurotypical-oriented society that hurts people who are different every single day with a thousand papercuts.
Another one is Jeremy De Lainey's struggle with anxiety (and, in my humble opinion, with undiagnosed ADHD, like. I know my people when I see them) and the unprocessed grief over the loss of his mother. No matter how much he tries to be everyone else's silver lining, Jeremy hasn't been okay for a while now, and this depiction of anxiety was so genuine and well done that I can't believe that Jeremy is a fictional character. The subtle ways in which anxiety creeps in and poisons Jeremy's life in a seemingly capricious way will give you the shivers, and his silent battle against it will leave you in tears. Because Jeremy is far from the first person who tries to spare everyone the pain of his anxiety, and he's far from the last person who will try.
I just can't ever hope to convey how much these books, and this second one in particular, mean to me, how close they are to my heart, how they make me want to go get them tattooed all over my skin and my soul so that everyone knows how much they mean to me and how they're a part of my soul forever.
Go read these books.
***
Rep: ADHD (potentially, not canon or explicitly stated), autism (diagnosed and undiagnosed both), anxiety, panic attacks, PTSD, stuttering and non-verbal episodes
How did I go so long without this achingly beautiful book in my life? Every chapter in this book is a damn masterpiece. I knew I had zero chill for the week by week chapters, but I had intended to binge this the second it was finished. And I did indeed binge it, because once you start this book, you cannot stop reading, it sucks you. Then holds you down for a three count while punching a few ribs behind the ref’s back. This picks up on Avery’s life, after the end of The Boy Who Steals Houses. Avery’s guardianship has been passed to Mr De Lainey, because in a household of seven children, what’s one more? The delightful chaos that is this house is everything. I could fall in love with them all with a literal fly on the wall book of their breakfast table. Completely mesmerising. Assuming we’re all here because we read the first book, you know these boys’ dark pasts. And even the happy family has their own tragic backstory as they’ve been struggling since Mrs De Lainey died. So prepare for an emotional wringing, because the hits Did. Not. Stop. Coming. I don’t know if the serial format it was published in dramatized it more to keep subscribers hooked, or if the other books walloped so much all the time and I didn’t pay as much attention to when it happened, but literally every chapter had something that stirred my emotions. The sweetest of moments, the lowest of lows, the broken-est of broken boys. My little heartstrings were plucked, tugged, and tied into a cargo net. And I would go through it all again in a heartbeat.
If C.G Drews has one million fans, I am one of them. If C.G Drews has only one fan, then that is me.
This book left me feeling the same exact way when I read The Boy Who Steals Houses: heartache. I’ve never loved an authors writing as much as I love C.G Drews. Her character’s are so, so real. When I first read The Boy Who Steals Houses, I was blow away. The second time I read it? I was left with a sense of understanding. And now, reading The Kings of Nowhere, I’ve come to understand exactly why I understand these two siblings so very well. It’s heartbreaking, it’s gut wrenching, and all you want to do is give the entire family (including Sam) a hug. I would go through hell and back for them, personally. These few years after reading TBWSH, I am happy to have finally gotten Avery’s point of view. An enjoyable read, truly. The autistic representation, among other things, was beautiful. The blanks of Avery pasts and traumas are filled in and bandaged up by the De Lainey’s. We follow Avery’s journey of healing, of self-acceptance, and support. Your heartstrings are pulled every which way and you have to thank C.G Drews for that. It was an overall enjoyable read and I cannot wait until The Kings of Nowhere is published! I will be buying it, for sure.
Gut-wrenching—in a good way. Oh man, this book! It will have you crying your eyes out one minute and chuckling in the next. MCs Avery and Jeremy are struggling HARD, and watching them navigate their troubles was addictive. Plus I loved the autism and anxiety rep, and C.G. Drews' writing is just magical!!
I’m literally crying 😭😭😭😭😭 I love the found family trope sooo much. avery was my fave character from the first book so I was really excited to read this one - it did not disappoint. At all.
avery & jeremy are so gentle and lovely together, their personalities just blend like watercolours on a page and it was so nice to read. The same can be said for all remaining characters in the book, including the delaney siblings & dad, who each had their own traits/personalities which shone. avery and dash bonding over the elven book was one of my fave moments (cuties for real). jack slowly warming up to avery, and avery slowly warming up and opening his heart to moxie and the delaney family. all the siblings making a caramel sweet heart and Jeremy’s ‘love’ note with moxie’s hand sewn patchwork hoodie for Avery made me CRY. vin is a spiteful, vindictive psycho, so reading all the interactions with the delaney family and her made me sick - I’m so glad there is an end to her diabolical idiocy !!!
I guess if there’s one thing to nitpick, is the disappearance/lack of mention of sam- I think we read just one or two phone calls, so it defo would have been nice to get a few more sam mentions. The acknowledgments in the book say that there’ll be a 3rd book so I’m sure that’s where we’ll get even more collective delaney family moments, including sam & avery!!!
I actually was close to tears many times, and spent the whole day itching to find out what would happen next
will be buying physical copies of this series.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
I'm contentedly sighing, having finally recovered from sobbing. Drews had such a gift for writing characters that worm their way under my skin and into my heart! I love the De Lainey family, and Sam and Avery make my heart ache with sadness. I'm so glad they all found each other.
I also must say that these are the best-written descriptions of persons with autism and anxiety and PTSD that I've read. Again, my heart breaks and yet is full because there is so much love in these pages.
I'm working my way through the short stories and eagerly anticipating the final book of this trilogy, although I will hate to say goodbye!
I was very excited to discover a sequel to what I consider one of the best books I have ever read: the Boy Who Steals Houses. And I am pleased to say that it is another brilliant book.
This one focuses in Avery - Sam's brother. It is a beautiful look at a very not beautiful thing - the impact of continual abuse and neglect of a child with ASD. The De Lainey family are front and centre this time too - not just the wonderful Moxie, but her older twin brothers Jack and Jeremy, her father, and the rest of the kids.
it is Jeremy who begins to unravel the barbed wire that has Avery in knots, while he himself is unravelling, masking his panic attacks at his failure to continue to be the heart and soul of everything with the smile his family loves. If I had anything about the book it would be this:
But it is a beautifully written book, with a lot of deep understanding of complex issues, complex characters and the power of love.
He was nine years old when they found his mother had cancer, when he understood the size of death and how it could fit its arms around his whole family
I have so many feels... so many! CG Drews has a way with words and deserves all the publishing contracts. Alas, this will remain a patreon only for now. I didn't think I would love to read about Avery this much, but it turns out I might relate to him more than I did to Sam (no worries I continue to love Sam and am very distressed at his current situation). I just want more of these disaster brothers and would die for them too fyi. The autism rep is AMAZING too!
I just love everything CG Drews writes! Her prose is stunning and the way she writes emotion is just so visceral - and not to mention characters you can't help but fall in love with. They have my whole heart and I already want to reread this and TBWSH and also need all the books about them please!
Everyone needs to read this series so I have more people to scream about it's amazingness with <3
With Sam locked up in juvenile detention, Avery is left with no one, until the De Lainey family step in to offer him a home. Yet a home is the last thing Avery wants, and certainly not with the people he blames for Sam's imprisonment. Determined to be reunited with Sam, Avery sets about wrecking their lives and proving himself utterly unlovable. But Avery might have met his match in his new foster brother Jeremy, and the rest of the De Lainey family. Until an old enemy shows up looking for revenge.
'The Kings of Nowhere' has easily sealed its position as one of my favourite reads of the year. The only question is whether it will beat its predecessor, 'The Boy Who Steals Houses'. If you enjoyed the first book in the series, the second is essential reading. We say goodbye to Sam, and take up the narrative reins with wildly reckless yet utterly loveable Avery, the sometime criminal and big kid who never got a chance to experience the family who took in his little brother in the first book.
This book will hurt. your. heart.
I read it on Patreon, and kept my thoughts in my mind with chapter by chapter updates on Goodreads. Looking through those updates, it's a feels festival. Avery shattered my heart. Mr De Lainey is the father we all need. I miss Sam! Avery and Jeremy are a wonderful pairing. The autistic rep is incredible. The found family vibes are off the scale. It's a crime this wasn't picked up by the author's publisher, and I can't wait until it's available to purchase independently, because there should be more books like this in the world.
C. G. Drews writes with such emotion, never sparing her characters devastation, but always with the hope that there is love and redemption waiting for you, if you have the bravery to place your trust in those who love you for who you are. This series will hurt and heal. I can't recommend it highly enough.
I’m tired of crying!! But this book has me sobbing like a little baby! Watching someone who hates themselves and thinks they’re unlovable be unconditionally accepted is so powerful and obviously sob-worthy. Poor Avery can’t catch even a second of a break.
Furthermore, though, it was intriguing reading Avery from a perspective outside of Sammy, especially his own POV. Almost every action or decision he makes is misinterpreted by other characters. We see Avery doesn’t necessarily need protected like Sammy believes, but he does crave the connection of people. Also, I was slightly shell shocked to find out Sammy is also autistic. I mean, the signs were there all along, but I guess I’m so used to reading diversity in books where each person has a different unique label that it didn’t occur to me that the author could write two characters who were autistic. And frankly, she does it masterfully, because while these characters have characteristics in line with autism, Sammy and Avery couldn’t be more different. And that’s the best part, these characters are real and human instead of a walking, talking set of symptoms. The quote below says it best.
“”I thought..” Jeremy swallows. “I thought autistic people didn’t like to be touched.” Avery grips Jeremy like he’s a boy, falling, and his words come thick with unshed tears. “I’m n-n-not autistic people. I’m Avery.””
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Diversity: Mc with autism, bipoc mc , sc and bcs , panic attacks , Queerness: Gay mc , Queer mc Associated song : Hireath by sanaa Content warning: Gun violence
I swear these books have crack in . Its probably the found family aspect and my own yerning need for it but OH MY GOD
I thought ATPNs had found family, the de laineys saw that and said "hold my beer"
This book hit me hard. While I have never stolen houses , the themes of this book is related heavily as a kid who grew up in the foster system , how you push those buttons , how you do it to see where that snapping point is. Its the quickest way to see who will give up on you
Somwtimes it just takes one person to recognise that and say no. To show that they aren't going anywhere
It just takes one person to believe.
I also loved that we got two points of view from avery and Jeremy and the before but from averys point of view up till the point of the first book ! I look forward to reading the third book ! And most likely have my heart broke
The song i chose is called hireath - while also being my dnd characters name , it also has a very relevant meaning
I'd been awaiting this sequel since finishing The Boy Who Steals Houses, and feel so privileged to have read it on Patreon. I hope to buy a physical copy whenever it's available! Drews' writing continues to be witty, soft, whimsical, and heart-wrenching in turns. Her personable, engaging writing style and complex, chaotic, fully realized characters are always a joy. I found myself rooting for Avery and Jeremy as much as or more than I did for Sam in the previous book, and I particularly enjoyed the portrait of Mr. DeLainey as a kind, trustworthy adult who truly "gets it" amidst this pile of lovable yet traumatized teenagers. Reading about such a loving parent who in turn creates an equally incredible (yet thoroughly imperfect) family is truly heartwarming. As an American, it was also really interesting to get a perspective on modern Australian life, and look up new-to-me terms like snake lollies or Scotch fingers. I would highly recommend this book to anyone who loves love, and especially young adults looking for quality autism spectrum rep.
Man, it’s criminal that the author’s publisher didn’t publish this properly. Even released on Patreon in a less-polished format, it’s amazing. Avery is my son and I would die for him.
My only gripe with all three books is the fact that there are villains at all that add unnecessary violence and conflict for the sake of having a climax. The strongest part of the books are the boys’ internal conflicts and the ghosts they’re fighting, not devil-horned, one-note villains lurking in corners with apparently nothing better to do than stalk our characters. Vin wasn’t nearly as bad in the last one, but in this book it becomes apparent she’s just there to give the story action when it doesn’t need it. I’d much rather have an emotional climax than a physical one, since the rest of the book is focused on Avery’s healing process.
But other than her, it’s great. Lots of hurt/comfort, and wholesome fluff and overall heart healing stuff. I binged this and the next one in one night, so that’s saying something.
Okay so great news! I loved it! This was both heartwarming AND heart-wrenching and full of fluff and also chaos, and it was just such a joy to follow Avery and Jeremy through the story.
I didn't love the first book, but when I saw that the next book featured Avery and Jeremy's POVs, I was definitely interested. And it didn't disappoint! Didn't love the villain, she was kinda lame and eye roll worthy, but she was completely overshadowed by Avery and Jeremy.
LOVED the anxiety rep. Super well done. And I resonated so much with Avery here, much more than I did with Sam. As someone who also is autistic, I never felt all that understood by anyone really. To see Avery be surrounded by people who want to and try their best to understand him fills me with warmth. I see a lot of myself in him and really grew to love him.
I'm really surprised I liked this as much as I did since I didn't love the first one and even considered DNFing it! I'm glad I stuck with it and got to spend more time with this lovely family ☺️
I *devoured* this book. Chapter by chapter on Patreon, and it has my whole entire heart. That being said. Most of the people following me on Goodreads would probably not like this book for certain reasons. So this is a review for me and only me. (Please read The Boy Who Steals Houses, though.) Mr De Lainey might just be my favorite fictional dad ever. The De Lainey siblings, especially Jeremy and Moxie, are people I would so dearly love to know in real life. And Avery... oh, Avery. I resonated with him more than I can say. I loved the conversations had around Avery's autism. I loved how the De Laineys accepted him fully for HIM, only him. I loved how Avery talked about the parallels between his autism and Sam's undiagnosed autism, that the De Lainey siblings read up on autism to support Avery and also thereby realized and accepted Sam's autistic traits too. I would pay to know a family like the De Laineys, and I'm so glad there's one more book for me to read because I don't want to say goodbye to them.
This book is achingly beautiful. Reading it in weekly installments was torturous in the best way possible.
Alternating POVs (a favourite of mine!) with a sprinkling of flashbacks, you cannot help but care deeply for the tangly mess that is Avery Lou and be ready to die for the chaotic delight that is Jeremy De Lainey.
Experiencing Avery's growth in trust is heart warming. There is some fantastic banter. Utterly amusing moments. And also painful tension and harrowing stress. It is an emotional roller coaster that often had me screaming at the page... some CG Drews excels at!
Thrilled to know this is meant to be a trilogy, and would encourage anyone and everyone to support these books so we can get that third book <3
I LOOOOVED this book! The De Lainey family trying to make a home for Avery was the sweetest thing ever! They’re all so good and I love every one of them! And Avery is so precious and sweet and fierce. I loved reading about his reactions to the family and him going softer.
Jeremy’s chapters were delightful and it was so great to get more insight in the reality of the De Laineys. All of the different family members were so fleshed out and they really stick out from each other! I love all their chaoticness and shenanigans!
So yeah, I loved this book! I laughed, I cried, I felt all the feels! If you haven’t read it, you really should! (After The Boy Who Steals Houses of course)
Just as beautiful and wrought with emotion as the first book in the series. I loved getting to see more of Avery's perspective this time and understanding some stuff that was going on in the first book a little better. Drews has such an interesting writing style that you don't really see often and I just adored it. There was a teasing for a third and final book in the series and I absolutely need it. I need to see them all together with Sam again and watch them save their lovely yellow house. I can't tell you how many times I cried reading The Boy Who Steals Houses and also this sequel. It means a lot to me :)
I've been wanting to read this for a very long time and honestly, I can't wait to read the next one. These books pierce my heart and make me want to scream on top of a mountain. I love each and every one of the characters from their witty humor to their own identity. The love all of them have for one another makes you feel like you're part of them. I felt seen and heard and honestly, it felt like someone was giving me a big warm hug (Yes, Avery I needed a tight hug too). This book made me feel less alone, and less trapped and I too can find little pockets of happiness in between the pages. Thank you for giving me the warm hug I so desperately needed.
Starting on book one, I came to love Sam and understand the pieces of what made him who he was, this book opened up the windows into Avery’s soul and had me wanting to hold him tightly. Once I had let myself into these books I couldn’t stop; I was up all hours reading, needing to find out what was in store for our precious boys. The writing is beautiful, and achingly tragic, a roller coaster from start to finish at absolute breakneck speed.
This book was entirely a story of acceptance, and finding where you below even when you think you don’t belong anywhere. Did I sob through most of this? Absolutely and I will curse CG endlessly for it.
I loved every second of it, even while hating it. These characters, Avery in particular, make bad decisions and I just want to stop them, but I guess this is what makes a good book - you care for the characters. Also, I cried through the whole thing, sometimes sad tears, somtimes angry tears and sometimes happy ones. It is very emotional and heartbreaking and I love it with all my heart.
I just hope everything will be well for the Lou brothers and the De Laineys for a change.