What it’s about: David is a freshman, and a middle child, and he's nothing like his older sister (who is super-smart and perfect) or his younger brother (who is autistic and needs constant supervision). But David, too, has his quirks - he is fascinated by the world of competitive eating. In fact, David is pretty proud of the fact that he can eat an entire large pizza in just over four minutes.
His family doesn't share David's interest, finding competitive eating more gross than impressive. That's pretty much fine by David - he mostly just wants to be left alone to hang out with his best friends, Cyn and HeyMan.
When David finds the remains of a half-eaten hot dog from one of his favorite competitive eaters on an online auction site, he figures he'd be crazy not to bid on it - after all, it's part of history, and the bidding starts at fifty cents! David just happens to have his mother's credit card information handy. He's surprised when someone else immediately starts bidding against him. But David finds a feature that allows him to enter a maximum amount he's willing to bid, and the computer will do the rest for him. He enters $20, figuring he can pay his mom back easily enough. But something goes wrong, and David ends up being charged $2,000.
David is sure his mother is going to end his life when she gets her next credit card statement. In a panic to figure out how to raise the money, he is recruited to enter a fraternity eating contest with a prize of $200. David figures this is his chance to use his one skill to get himself out of this mess. Unfortunately, things don't quite work out as he'd hoped.
But luck is on David's side, as his local pizza place decides to host a pizza eating contest with a grand prize of $5,000. David figures he's guaranteed to win - the pizza contest is happening the same weekend as the Nathan's Hot Dog Eating Contest, which will draw all the big names in competitive eating, leaving David going up against local talents he's confident he can beat.
Unfortunately for David, entering the contest has some costs, requiring him to take on "investors". And David discovers, to his great displeasure, that a retired competitive eater happens to live in the next town over - and he's feeling hungry once again. But the greatest problem of all appears on the day of the contest in the form of David's ultimate nemesis.
It's a dog-eat-hot-dog world, and David finds himself suddenly feeling nauseous...
What I thought: This was a really fun, engaging, quick read. David is a little weird, but he's a nice guy, and his misadventures are funny. There are lots of serious moments in the story, too; David has to take care of his autistic younger brother, which is not easy. But in babysitting Mal, David learns more about his brother, and they start to connect in ways David never thought possible. It's sweet to see how their bond deepens over the course of the book.
Why I chose those shelves:
Content Warnings
Family issues: There are lots of tension between David and his other family members (mostly due to a lack of sincere communication); self harm, violence: at one point, Mal self-harms (banging his head against a wall) and he hits, bites, and kicks people.
Characters
Korean: David is a white male 9th grader, but one of his best friends is a girl of Korean heritage; neurodiverse: David's younger brother is autistic
Genres
humor: The story is realistic fiction, but told with a bit of a humorous slant - it's not laugh-out-loud funny, but I smiled quite a few times; coming of age: David is very immature, particularly at the start of the story, but he experiences growth and increased maturity toward the end of the story
Style
Topics
sports: This book is all about competitive eating
Why I rated it like I did: This is an enjoyable story about a middle child who does not value himself, but slowly learns that he is valuable. He is a fan of competitive eating, and decided to pursue it himself when he is scammed out of $2,000 (which he got via his mom's credit card).