The story line is a bit convoluted but pretty decent, and the characters generally well-developed. So, it is a shame that I cannot give a higher rating to this book.
But, I could never give more than two stars to a book where the protagonist and his friends do not just condone, but seem to actively advocate for adults having sex with children, and where an entire scene of the book was included just so this stance could be made known to the reader. And no Dan/Jeffrey, pointing to another country and saying 'it's legal there' in no way makes it OK. i) Slavery, US segregation, and much of what the Nazis did were all legal. iii) Country abc makes it OK for adults to have sex with minors, but country xyz makes it illegal, with penalties of substantial jail terms including hard labour, to be gay. Do you still want to point to 'what other countries' are doing?
The whole stance becomes more problematic not just because Dan is sure to point out that having sex with kids is OK throughout the book, but also because Dan regularly lets the reader know a huge part of the reason he is sexually attracted to Trevor is Trevor's childlike physique - ugh and double ugh! And, strangely enough while Dan is advocating for 12 year old children's abilities to consent to sex with 30 year old adults, he still also argues that a 15-year and 49-week old must remain with his abusive mother and "monster" of a stepfather because until he is 16 he is not able to decide to emancipate himself.
I am surprised that I managed to finish this book, but thrilled I can return it to the library. I will not read any more books in this series nor by this author. It's a shame, because aside from the whole 'statutory rape is OK' thing the book could otherwise have been good - the reason I gave two rather than one stars even though I'm not sure I should rate the book so highly because the whole 'statutory rape is OK' thing is a really Big Thing, a really Deplorable, Disgusting, Dismaying Thing.
TRIPLE UGH!!!!