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Head of the River

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It's the most elite school sporting event in the country. Nine rowers, 2000 gruelling metres and one chance for glory in the ultimate team sport. Sit forward ... ROW.

Tall, gifted and the offspring of Olympians, superstar siblings Leni and Cristian Popescu are set to row Harley Grammar to victory in the Head of the River.
With six months until the big race, the twins can't lose. Or can they?

When Cristian is seduced by the easy route of performance-enhancing drugs, and Leni is suffocated with self-doubt, their bright futures start to fade. Juggling family, high expectations, study, break-ups, new relationships and wild parties, the pressure starts to build.

As the final moments tick down to the big race, who’ll make it to the start line? And who'll plummet from grace?

304 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2014

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About the author

Pip Harry

13 books108 followers
Pip Harry is an Australian children’s author and journalist. Her middle grade novel, The Little Wave, won the CBCA 2020 Book of the Year Award and the Speech Pathology Australia Book of the Year. It was shortlisted for the 2020 NSW Premier's Literary Awards – Ethel Turner Prize for Young People's Literature.

Her young adult novels include I’ll Tell You Mine, Head of the River, and Because of You, shortlisted for the CBCA Book of the Year Awards, Victorian Premier's Literary Award and Queensland Literary Awards.

Are You There, Buddha? is a 2022 CBCA Notable book and was nominated for the Ethel Turner prize.

Pip’s latest middle grade novel, August & Jones is out now.

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Displaying 1 - 29 of 49 reviews
Profile Image for Paula Weston.
Author 16 books858 followers
October 14, 2014
Pip Harry rocks.

Loved this story for its characters, its heart and its originality. It smashes gender stereotypes and gives those of us non-athletes a glimpse of the pressures of competitive sport (internal and external).

I laughed out loud (great dialogue!), loved the dynamic between siblings Leni and Cris, and got a little choked up towards the end when everything comes to a head (no pun intended).

You don't have to be into sports to enjoy this one. Head of the River is quality contemporary YA, written by an author who's going from strength to strength.

(And you haven't read Pip's debut, I'll Tell You Mine, check that out too.)
Profile Image for Calzean.
2,770 reviews1 follower
December 21, 2017
Definitely a YA book written by an author who loves rowing. Rowing seems to me to be a sport for those who are tall, fit and focused and this book certainly captures the feel, smells and aches of this sport. The alternate chapters narrated by the twins Leni and Cris work well as they deal with the pressure to perform, high expectations, relationships and schoolwork. The message of the danger of performance enhancing drugs was also well told.
Profile Image for ALPHAreader.
1,271 reviews
June 19, 2014
Two days after Head of the River and Harley Grammar is subdued at morning assembly; instead of singing ‘We are the Champions’ and back-slapping the rowing stars, the entire school is in a state of mourning for an unnamed but seriously ill student.

Meanwhile, Leni Popescu is in her own state of mourning and recovery after an accident. She’s at once scared for what her injury will mean for her rowing career, and worried about the same student her schoolmates are keeping vigil for.

Jump ahead and it’s six months to Head of River – back to where it all began.

Leni and Cristian Popescu are rowers for Harley Grammar and part of a proud rowing family. Leni and Cristian’s mum and dad were Olympic rowers – their dad a silver medallist and part of the Romanian eight, while their mum won gold as stroke for the Australian pair. Their parents met on the dance floor at the athlete’s bar at the Olympic Village in Seoul, and their dad migrated to Australia to wed their mum after a long-distance romance.

After years of gruelling early-morning starts, pulls on the ergo machine and fighting tooth and oar for a place on their respective crews, Leni and Cristian are getting ready for Head of the River – a Victorian rowing regatta that is the oldest continuous schoolboy (now girls too) rowing event in the world, dating back to 1868. To win Head of the River is to be a hero for your school. For Leni, especially, it’s a way to kick-start her Olympic rowing career.

But for Cristian, training for Head of the River this last year has been nothing but a prolonged soul-crushing. He’s not fit enough, as his coach revels in reminding him. A new boy, Sam, from the American school in Singapore has been at Harley Grammar for only a few months and rowing even less than that – but he’s being praised as a natural, and is breathing down Cristian’s neck for his spot on the first crew.

Through alternating chapters, we’ll see the six months leading up to Leni and Cristian’s Head of the River – the obstacles they face, mistakes they make and lessons learned through blood, sweat and Yarra River water.

‘Head of the River’ is the new contemporary YA novel from Australian author Pip Harry.

I have been excited for this book ever since I interviewed Pip Harry back in 2012, and she mentioned that her next book was going to be; “a YA novel which focuses on a brother and sister who are training for the Head of the River rowing regatta.” I was so in love with this idea for a number of reasons: the main one being how rare Aussie, contemporary YA sports novels (with male and female protagonists!) are these days. Another big reason for the excitement was the focus on rowing: because I was a rower. For one year of high school I donned a zoot suit, about killed myself on the ergo machines and participated in regatta after regatta after regatta. I’m not saying I was a good rower (my coach often yelled at me via her megaphone as she rode her bike along the bank that I had to “keep my head in the boat”, because I had a tendency to look at the passing scenery. What can I say? I’m more of a dreamer than a rower). So I felt an instant connection to this book.

Head of the River is one of the most prestigious school sporting events in Victoria. The event started out (back in 1868!) as a duel-style race between Melbourne Grammar and Scotch College on the Yarra River – and has now broadened to include boys and girls’ heats, and inter-school rivalries like you’ve never seen before. It is a big bloody deal, and Pip Harry has written about it brilliantly – blending the history, pride, and competitiveness beautifully with the very relatable stories of an ambitious sister and her down-trodden brother.

Pip Harry actually really plays around with gender roles in this book. It’s sister Leni who is the gung-ho competitor with her sights on Head of the River cup and a career, like her parents’, as an Olympic rower. It’s so refreshing to read a young female character with this kind of bull-headed drive. Sure, a big character arc for Leni is learning that it’s as much her friendships in the boat that have to matter as winning, but I loved her determination and machismo;

In the middle is a cut-out of the Head of the River cup, which I’ve coloured in with gold pen. I want it so badly it hurts. I like to touch the cup with my hand and imagine my bow girl going over the line first, thousands of people screaming on he banks of the Barwon River. Thinking about it gives me goose bumps. There’s a quote posted up that I think about during training: ‘Pain is just weakness leaving the body.’

By contrast, Cristian feels constantly dwarfed by his sister’s rising star. He’s not as good (or passionate) as Leni and their parents when it comes to rowing, and he feels the constant pressure to keep physically fit – particularly because he has a problem with temptation and portion control. Cristian is also seriously hung-up on one of Leni’s fellow rowers, a petite dancer called Penny who Cristian seems to continuously humiliate himself in front of;

‘It won’t be the last time you screw up,’ she says. ‘Dad and I lost plenty of races.’
‘But you won plenty, too.’
‘Sure. But in rowing, you’ve got to learn to take the rough water with the glassy pond. Otherwise it will break your heart. Now show me your hands.’


But, as hinted in that opening chapter, stormclouds are gathering for brother and sister Popescu. Cristian’s negative self-image is leading him down a seriously dangerous path, and when Leni gets closer to the boy trying to steal her brother’s place in the boat, it causes a rift in their family.

Speaking of family, Harry explores the Popescu dynamics beautifully and it was something else I really related to. Their father is Romanian, and migrated to Australia to marry their mother – the kids sometimes feel embarrassed by his European attitudes and poor English-language skills, and even after so many years of living here their father still feels the brunt of being a ‘foreigner’. I loved the second-generation explorations, and just the fact that the family were so close – it was a double-edged sword in that Leni and Cristian really want to make them proud, but that put added pressure on them too.

I’ve also got to say that Pip Harry has the private school scene down. I attended a private all girl’s school, and I must admit that part of my wanting to be a rower was because I thought that particular sport had a certain cachet to it that I didn’t have otherwise, being from a very blue-collar, working-class background that was so different from many of my peers. I just thought Harry captured that world so damn well. In one scene particularly;

Instead of standing with the other parents drinking from plastic champagne glasses and eating dainty chicken sandwiches, my parents are tinkering with boats. They’ve been tinkering with boats my whole life. Dad’s adjusting the height of a rigger. Mum’s oiling a squeaky seat wheel. Dad’s the Harley Grammar boat caretaker, so he fixes, tunes and cleans all sixty boats in our fleet.
Mum has a smudge of grease on her cheek and she’s dressed in cargo shorts and an old T-shirt. I feel an itch of embarrassment. The other rowing mothers have white teeth and done-up hair, Broome pearls and designer jeans. The dads wear polo shirts and aviator sunnies. They carry long lens SLR cameras and the 'Saturday Age'.


Yep. That about sums it up.

‘Head of the River’ is a compelling and thoughtful contemporary Australian YA sports novel – that it has a brother and sister protagonist who don’t conform to gender stereotypes is also deserving of praise. But ‘Head of the River’ is also compulsive reading – with a plot that catches you like a crab and pulls you under. I loved it.
Profile Image for Bree T.
2,426 reviews100 followers
January 21, 2015
Leni and Cristian Popescu are twins. Both are scholarship students to a prestigious Melbourne school for their ability in rowing. Offspring of Olympic champions, Leni and Cristian look certain to guide their school to victory in the Head of the River race on the Barwon River.

It’s six months until the Head of the River. Cristian is overweight, having indulged a little too much in the food he loves and less of the training he needs. He finds himself dropped from the firsts, down to the seconds because of his lack of fitness. However, if he can get himself back to peak, he’ll earn his way back to the firsts. Cristian tries, he does but he cannot resist the lure of kebabs and other fatty foods. When his friend, who was dropped down to the seconds for being too small comes to him with a way they can both get back to the firsts, Cristian is tempted. Anabolic steroids and diet pills will help him lose the weight and build the muscle. And they don’t test in school, right? It’s just until he gets back to where he needs to be. Then he’ll stop.

Leni suffers from a lack of confidence, in herself and in her team. She’s always been so focused, so set on her goals. She wants it badly but with study, a failing relationship, an intriguing new boy and the struggles of teenage life, Leni can see her dream slipping away. Both of the twins are under enormous pressure and it’s all starting to come apart.

I loved Pip Harry’s first book, I’ll Tell You Mine and I’ve been meaning to read this one since it came out last year. It begins two days after the Head of the River race and someone is fighting for their life but you don’t know who or what happened. Then it goes back six months, to when preparation begins for the famous race. I have to admit, I didn’t grow up here so I’d never heard of the race but my husband looked at me like I was an idiot when I asked him if he knew what it was, so obviously it’s pretty big. He grew up in Colac and apparently there was a regatta on the lake down there every year, something the whole town went to. I don’t know much about rowing, other than the Olympics and the Cambridge/Oxford rivalry but it seems as though it’s pretty well established in Melbourne.

Leni and Cristian aren’t from a wealthy background like a lot of their fellow students. They were accepted into the school on their grit and talent, both having been taught to row by their Olympian parents. Their father Vasile is Romanian born who emigrated to Australia to marry their mother after the fall of communism and then rowed for his new country. Vasile is brilliant and knows what he’s doing but his tenuous grasp on the English language has held him back. He’s the boat caretaker for Harley Grammar, their exclusive private school but is probably deserving of coaching at least the seconds, maybe even the firsts. Their mother Jodie is a medal winner for Australia and now works long shifts as a nurse. Money is always tight and they live in Fitzroy as opposed to the big mansions in Toorak that other families from the school reside in, but they get by. They’re a tight-knit family, although there are some cracks beginning to show as Leni and Cristian begin their preparations.

Leni and Cristian are amazing characters. They both give voice to the narrative here and it switches between them seamlessly. Pip Harry has done a fantastic job at capturing them separately and together as a sibling unit. Leni is so focused, so driven that it’s almost like she barely has any time for anything else. She’s always training or studying to keep up her perfect grades. She has few friends and although she has a boyfriend, she’s conflicted about the relationship. He’s a perfectly nice guy, very popular but he doesn’t give her the flutters. There’s a new guy, someone who has made the firsts incredibly quickly, much to the resentment of some of the other students. He gives Leni the flutters but he’s also complicated and she cannot work him out. Leni is pretty solitary and it seems that in the end, it’s where she falls down. Their rowing is a team sport and she needs to learn to develop that trust in her teammates, to believe in them that they will all be a part of getting her where she wants to go. You really see Leni change and evolve over the course of the book as she makes tentative steps towards friendship with her team, opening up and allowing them to see a different part of her, the part of her that isn’t just Rowing Leni.

Cristian is far more sociable and popular than Leni – he loves hanging with his friends, the camaraderie of being on the team. When he’s dropped to the seconds, he’s devastated. He’s swayed to try using something to help get him back into shape and although he’s conflicted over what he’s doing, feeling a terrible guilt he is ecstatic at the immediate results. He’s dropping weight and building muscle, his times are amazing and he’s assured to get back into the firsts. But taking this way out will come at a price for Cristian and a far greater price for someone else. Throughout the book, the incident that is alluded to in the beginning was hanging over me as I occasionally wondered who it might be and why. When it happened, I felt that it still managed to take me by surprise, especially the way in which it played out.

Head of the River is an engrossing story but it’s the characters that make it shine, especially all of the Popescu family. They showcase what it might be like for children to grow up in the shadow of famous parents and try and make their own way in a sport that their name is already famous in. Vasile is a brilliant character, he’s a bit arms-waving wildly overexcited eastern European sporting father at times but then he’ll show a remarkable sensitivity and ability to engage with his children on a much deeper level. I was a bit surprised he never questioned the change in Cristian, but that is perhaps the biggest example of how he was a father first to him, coach and cheer squad second. He simply could never have imagined that his own child would do that, even when it’s revealed late in the book that there are clearly people who have their suspicions, whether it’s borne out of jealousy or out of a true curiosity and hunch.

This book further cements Pip Harry as a must-read author for me! Australian YA has always been fabulous, so many amazing books being published and this is a brilliant example of what is on offer.
Profile Image for Louisa with an A.
465 reviews4 followers
April 30, 2016
"In no other sport does the word team mean so much than in rowing."


Have you ever picked up a book and thought, This book is for me, about me. This book is mine.
Reading Head of the River was like picking up a book about my life and changing a few characters and situations. So for those who don't know I row. I've been racing for eight years. I've been rowing for 13 years. And, thanks to my dad, I've been around rowing my whole life. My dad was a rower himself, but unfortunately due to a back injury he had to stop but he still coaches and helps in the running of regattas. For my whole life I've been known as 'Laurie's daughter.' I've been chasing a ghost every time I get into a boat. I've struggled with the concept of being the daughter to a legend in such a small community, with being treated with respect or contempt I never earned. To always being treated differently to my peers for something I have no control over. Although this has made me the person I am today, and a better judge of character it's still hard to be faced with something like treatment that differs to the other competitors when you're 13 because of who you're related to.
I connected so well with Leni, she had so much to live up to and although she knew her parents would be proud no matter what, she still felt that anything other than first place would pale in compare to their previous accomplishments.
I see that gold medal every day. It makes me feel like I have so much to live up to.

I wouldn't want to swap my rowing experience for anyone else's and I feel like that would be the same for Leni, however being viewed as my own person first before my dad seems like such a hard ask sometimes. Even some of my closest rowing mates still see me, introduce me and treat me as 'Laurie's daughter' not plain Louisa first and foremost.
Wishing for once, the announce wouldn't mention who my parents are.

This has happened to me, I was rowing down the last 250 meters of a race and I could here the announcer call "and Miss Louisa Anderson, yes the same Anderson as our own very Laurie Anderson." I came second in that race but I remember hearing that and thinking what that had anything to do with my rowing.

Besides the rowing part of the book both characters deal with the stresses of school, friends and romances. Cristian was a complex character, when he wasn't pining after Penny. He had to face the darker side of rowing, the disappointment when being dropped from the first eights and the pressure of trying to make it back into the best boat.
I eat when I feel like this, trying to fill the empty feeling with sugar and fat. It works for a bit, then more blackness comes in its place.

It was refreshing to have a male character deal with an eating disorder and then the dependence on performance enhancing drugs and finally his resolution.
Cristian and Leni go through a significant amount of character development which was subtle enough to not notice until the tail end of the middle. You can see how changed they are and how much they've grown.

No matter what else this book is saying you can tell how much the author loves the sport and how much respect she has for rowing. It's definitely a special sport that once you become apart of if it's hard to stop being apart of it.
"That's why I want you to row. You'll meet people who'll stick by you no matter what. Who will show you more kindness than you can stand."
Profile Image for Steph.
178 reviews120 followers
September 2, 2014
I would like to preface this review by saying that I ordinarily actively avoid books-about-sports because I don't really understand sports. The only sport I follow is AFL because my family would not tolerate it if I paid no attention whatsoever to who's going to make the eight. The extent of my involvement in actual sports involving me was playing Aussie Rules in primary school, and only making the team because my school needed to make up the numbers. I took a chest mark and kicked it out of bounds on the full and that was the extent of it (I still got a medal). I swam a bit as a kid but I didn't like swimming competitively. I'm not known for my coordination. I'm a thinking, brainy, sitting-at-home-and-pondering-the-universe person. I'm not a person who can judge distance or move at speed with grace while simultaneously not dropping the ball or participate effectively in a team without getting distracted by an interesting looking tree.

That said, Head of the River is a novel about rowing, so it's a sportsy novel, and despite my non-sportsy nature, I loved it. I really enjoyed Pip Harry's debut novel I'll Tell You Mine, but I felt her sophomore novel even more authentic, engaging and compelling. The technical detail added to the realism, a strong sense of what it's really like to row competitively and have such a ridiculous amount of expectation placed on you.

Doping in sports is very relevant, and the motivations of the characters well-drawn - despite both Leni and Cristian making some less-than-stellar choices, they remained characters with whom I could empathise and I wanted things to work out well for them. I can't relate to the performance-enhancing drugs bit because there aren't any performance-enhancing drugs you can take to make you a better writer (I think there's a movie about this? I wouldn't take them even if they did exist. I'm a bit funny about taking panadol), but I could relate to their ambition and, to some degree, the pressure they experienced.

I probably have an unconscious bias towards thinking Australian contemporary YA is awesome (it's probably not unconscious if I'm conscious of it), but I think this is really fabulous. I think this is a novel relevant enough to be taught in schools, covering a whole lot of themes very well - drugs in sports, self-esteem and body-image, leadership and team dynamics, expectations and pressure. A novel well worth reading even if you're not sportsy - it's well-characterised and honest and engrossing.
Profile Image for Anna Waggener.
Author 1 book23 followers
April 6, 2016
Disclaimer: I met Pip Harry at a writing retreat and so know her personally. I'm a tough critic, however, and would never rate a book five stars if I didn't mean it.

It's hard to know where to start in a review for this novel, which is about so many things and so lovingly written. Ostensibly built around competitive rowing and the drive of a pair of Australian twins to live up to their parents' Olympic accomplishments, Head of the River layers in the complexities of growing up, of letting go, and of learning some hard lessons along the way. It delivers multidimensional relationships and big, decadent themes while subverting stereotypes. It brings together a cast of characters who are compelling and flawed and wholly real.

Leni is a young woman who, more than anything else, is afraid of disappointing herself. She hits her books hard and hits her training even harder, making her often uncomfortable with the reputation she's crafted: one where fun isn't part of her profile. She's clumsy with relationships and finds it difficult to let her guard down. She's very close, though, to her twin, Cristian, who is thoughtful, gregarious, and secretly plagued with self-doubt and body image issues. Cris finds himself swayed by the strong wills of those around him, accepting the expectations of his parents and coach like a mantle he must live up to at any cost. Leni and Cris's push and pull is beautifully executed, allowing the pair to find strength in each other as well as their individualism.

Because this novel is longer than a lot of contemporary YA, the story and characters have plenty of room to breathe. There's a risk of the plot feeling slow or overburdened, but the voices of both narrators are too authentic and enjoyable to allow for that. Instead, the transformation Pip Harry guides her characters through blends humor and some heavy moments in a way that that never feels forced, preachy, or condescending.

As someone who knows next to nothing about rowing, I can also attest that this book turns the river and the sport into characters you want to spend more time with. Precisely because she doesn't sugarcoat it, Harry brings out the elegance of the sport and the beauty of the competition. I stayed with these characters every step of the way.
Profile Image for Nomes.
384 reviews365 followers
June 24, 2017
Head of the River by Pip Harry was a highlight of my 2014 reading year. It was absorbing and captivating, unpredictable and unique and is a brilliant addition to our much-praised and thriving Aussie YA scene.

Pip Harry is one of those YA authors who capture the teen voice and experience so authentically and without condescension. Her characters are brave and true and flawed and the kind of teen who, were I to meet them in real life, have the power to inspire adults with their courage and intelligence (in spite of making some foolish decisions ;) ).

One of the reasons I love contemporary YA is because it's a genre that lends itself so well to capturing emotion and placing readers in the characters shoes. Harry excels at this: the emotion and passion and pressure is captured so viscerally -- giving an immediacy and realness to everything Leni and Cristian go through. It's incredible -- the kind of commitment and dedication it takes for teenagers to train and compete and perform.

While Head of the River centres around Lani and Cristian's rowing -- there are just so many more themes that seamlessly blend into the work. Though the themes could lend itself to something more heavy-going, Harry's prose reads effortlessly and I found myself sailing through, finding it all too easy to keep reading just-one-more-chapter.

The strength of Harry's writing is how the characters are so honest on the pages. They have hopes and fears and keep secrets, they crush and swoon and are let down. This is a story that explores highs and lows. One thing I loved: while some plot threads were heading towards obvious disaster or conflict -- nothing was predictable and everything played out so organically it felt real.

So highly recommended. I hope many more readers have the chance to read Head of the River. Meanwhile, I'll be hanging out for Harry's next book :D
Profile Image for Sue.
244 reviews34 followers
May 18, 2015
Leni and Cristian Popescu having rowing in their blood. Both parents have been Olympic champions and it seems like nothing can stop a meteoric rise to the top of their sport. Leni is on top of her game, training hard and loved up with her boyfriend, Adam. Cris, however, is flagging. Overweight and inherently lazy, as many 17 year olds are, he wants to keep his seat in the first eight without having to put in the hard yards. As Leni's star rises and she is made Captain of Boats, Cris loses his seat in the first eight, along with Leni's boyfriend, Adam, who is also his best mate.
Adam comes up with a solution - he and Cris begin taking steroids to help them regain their places in the eight. After he and Leni break up, Adam becomes even more determined and he and Cris are set on a path that will end in devastation for everyone involved.
Leni becomes attracted to a new boy, Sam, who has also been made Captain of Boats, and she, too, is set on an emotional roller coaster that threatens to derail her rowing ambitions.
I found this novel was set in a world I knew little about growing up (rowing, private schools, drug use), but I still recognised the kids at this school as people I might have known. Leni and Cris's parents are really well-drawn, particularly her Romanian father, and I found all the characters relatable.
Leni is a great character with believable flaws and believable strengths. She is loyal and committed to rowing, sometimes to the detriment of her other relationships. Cris reminded me of my son - sometimes struggling to find his place in the world and looking for a moment to shine.
This is a great story about friendship, rowing and what is really important in life. Definitely an engaging novel for the young adult reader.
Recommended for ages 15 and up.
Profile Image for kb.
696 reviews22 followers
August 23, 2017
Last book read in 2014 and it was so good! Learned about rowing, Romanian food and basically, the lengths we humans go through to get what we want. Def one of the best reads this year!
Profile Image for Ella H.
1 review
August 13, 2018
Basically Head of the river is about 2 rowers who are tall, gifted and the offspring of Olympians (rowers). Leni and Christian are set to row Harley Grammar to victory in the Head of the river race. They have six months till the race and the story tells us about many things that happen during that time, to improve their performance and also many distractions including boyfriends and school grades. Christian ends up using performance enhancing drugs to improve his performance and keep him in the firsts as his future starts to fade; with no risk or is there?

The story takes place at the rowing sheds most of the time or out on the river but school and home is referenced a lot. In the beginning it is mostly at home as the event that comes at the end of the story is introduced without you knowing. Leni and Christian are main characters of the book. Leni is a independent girl who is focused on school and rowing but has a boyfriend that supports her in rowing. She is very gifted in rowing and continues to be the stoke of the girls first VIII but there comes a problem where she is slowly stripping off her gifted abilities. Where as Christian is focused on school grades and rowing but slowly focuses more on rowing but likes to cheat as he faces a dilemma where he is beginning to gain weight. He also is always trying to get this one girl called Penny who is in Leni’s crew. There is another character who is called Adam, who supposedly drags Christian into making one big bad decision but he suffers the consequences. A problem Adam faces with Christian is keeping his place in the firsts boat but also trying to keep his girlfriend Leni. Leni and Christian’s parents also play a main role in the book as they have strong opinions, well at least their dad does and he is very very disappointed by some bad decisions his son made and the outcome that came along with it.

First Leni and Christian do there first regatta before head of river and get a promising result but can tell they both need to make some improvements. Also the boy’s crews have re-trials during the season and it is looking hopeful that Christian stays in the firsts but there is a chance he gets bumped down to the seconds because of his weight and also needs to maintain his grades and rowing for his scholarship. Whilst that is happening Leni is having a good time enjoying early mornings. Later Christian gets beaten by Sam in his single scull because he falls out which means he isn’t in firsts anymore and makes his dream of captain of boats eliminated. After that Leni is starting to realise that Adam is getting annoying, but tries to focus on getting captain of boats and school to keep her scholarship. After that rowing camp is approaching and this means the final trials for the season are coming up. Christian needs to find a way to lose some weight and gain fitness and Adam needs some meat on him so, Adam found a guy at his gym who was offering performance enhancing drugs for both of them to improve and make their spots. They get the spots but people find it suspicious but whilst that is happening Leni pulls out of her 2km erg and ends up being demoted from stroke seat to behind her enemy. After that Leni realises that she loves someone… but is not Adam. Adam and Christian continue on their drugs and plan to use it all the way up until head of river. While on that camp Leni and someone share some love without getting caught but he realises they shouldn’t have done it but Leni doesn’t regret it and he ignores her because he never told her about someone else he was dating. After that everything falls downfall for Christian he gets caught for doping… and Leni becomes captain of boats and their family get a boat named after them on behalf of their dad. In the end Leni talks to the supposedly love of her life. A big even happens at head of river besides from the fact that Leni’s crew win.

I like this book a lot because I can understand it. I can understand everything that happens even though it doesn’t happen as common in our days. Since I do this sport I understand how this one event is so important and why Christian sacrifices his reputation against his dads. Also it wasn’t actually very predictable despite it seeming obvious… a boy takes drugs, he either does or doesn’t get caught. The book was a bit confusing and I only just got some of it when I read over the beginning again, as it actually starts off with the sad news but you don’t realise because it hasn’t actually told you what happened, you just know that someone is in hospital. Also I do like the ending because there are new relationships that are forming that were meant to be in the beginning but end up happening right at the end. But then again the ending is bad because something terrible happens to someone and I wasn’t expecting it at all. I connect with this book, more specifically one of the characters Leni, in the sense that I was something special in the sport but starting needing to work harder to try and be something special. I like how the author starts off with main event of the story without you realising… that what I like about Pip Harry’s style.

I would recommend this book especially to rowers but also to people in the sport industry because this just helps explain the sorts of things that go through kids heads in these kinds of situations. I also recommend it to anyone who happens to pick it up because it really describes rowing and what it can be like and even though you may not be interested in it actually relates to any type of sport of activity you may do. “Believe me, my young friend, there is nothing – absolutely nothing – half so much worth doing as simply messing about in boats.” ~ Kenneth Grahame, The Wind in the Willows. Also I rate this book 4.8 stars out of 5.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Emily Mead.
569 reviews
September 19, 2014
Read reviews, see awesome GIFS and see my rambling thoughts at my blog, The Loony Teen Writer

You don’t need to like rowing in order to enjoy this book. Or even know anything about it (I certainly don’t). You don’t even need to like sport.

Take me, for example. I am a great believer in the power of INSIDE over outside.

I know nothing about rowing. Okay, I know that Australia’s pretty good at it. And I know that it gives you calluses, because a guy in my grade at school is a rower. So I wasn’t ridiculously excited for this book, because I didn’t think I would be able to relate to it.

I am happy to say that I was wrong.

Head of the River is told in a twin POV…literally. Cristian and his twin sister Leni, children of Olympic rowers, switch between telling the story. Cristian’s story involved emotional eating, taking up drugs and lack of self-esteem. Leni’s, meanwhile, was more about the pressure of the sport and learning to work within a team.

Despite having such pressure, being kids of Olympians, I absolutely LOVED the parents in this story (parental involvement, hooray!). The Dad, Vasile Popescu (yes, I am proud I remembered his name), is Romanian and doesn’t speak the best English. He pushes his kids but he also wants the best for them. The Mum is more laid-back, with the attitude that it doesn’t matter what happens – she still loves her kids. And she’s always looking out for Leni and Cris.

So we have Cris. In a switch of the usual, he’s the one who has issues with his weight, rather than from a female’s POV – which was really great, since eating disorders are not something only girls suffer from. You don’t see that often in YA. He turns to drugs as a way to enhance his performance, and his thought process was well-written – going in circles from “I have to do this” to “What if people find out?”

Then there’s Leni. She’s the over-achiever, the one who gets straight A’s as well as being a champion rower. I think I could relate to her a lot better than I could to Cris – she responds to the pressure by trying even harder, and there’s no release for her, because even the thing she loves (rowing) is a competition. So I could relate to her really well.

Both of the twins often reminisce to the start of their rowing, how none of it mattered. Both of them sometimes deal with their issues in ways that aren’t the best, but it’s also a growing process for both of them, and there was a lot of character development there. Leni loosens up a bit and eventually is able to work in a team and have fun with the other girls.


There were a few things I wasn’t so keen on, though.

Cristian’s main conflict, right towards the end, felt rushed to me – we didn’t see all the consequences of what he’d done, and he seemed (to me, at least) to get off pretty lightly.

I also wasn’t crazy about the romance sub-plots, because I didn’t feel they were that necessary in what was already a strong story.

Then there was the final ending, which was ABSOLUTELY heartbreaking and a clear message to sportspeople in general – like before, it felt really rushed and there wasn’t enough build-up for it. It kind of came out of nowhere. Well, not out of nowhere because it was hinted in the very beginning. But it had an almost tacked-on effect which felt…not quite as though it was added for shock value, but as though it wasn’t particularly necessary.

In the end, though, I really did love the twins’ stories, the cautions about using drugs, and the unique use of rowing as the framework for the story. This is one to read regardless of how much you like sport.
Profile Image for Kelly (Diva Booknerd).
1,106 reviews295 followers
July 22, 2015
3½ Stars
http://www.divabooknerd.com/2014/06/h...
Head of The River should be read by not only those who are interested in rowing, but for all teens who compete and strive to break into a professional level. It follows the dual points of view of siblings and twins, Leni and Cristian, whose parents are both Olympians and respected members of the rowing community, being only natural to both take up the sport themselves. I really enjoyed seeing both points of view, with Leni at the top of her sport, while Cristian struggled to maintain the same level, often feeling as though he was competing against his sister in the eyes of his parents. He sees Leni as having it all, but not realising that she struggles out of the water, socially, and finding herself in a lackluster relationship while she fights her feelings for new boy Sam. Cristian seemed terribly unhappy, his storyline was more engaging and allowed the reader to relate to his daily struggle with weight and his own mental anguish.

The storyline more than ever, is a really popular topic for discussion in Australia at the moment with the alleged drugs scandal at the Essendon AFL club, and the investigation by ASADA, the Australian Sports Anti Doping Authority. But where the media will just report on facts and accusations, we rarely see a personal side of the effects that the scandal had had on players and their families. Although Leni and Cristian are fictional, it allows the reader to see just what sacrifices athletes make for their chosen sport and that they are prone to mistakes, just as you and I are.

I wanted to enjoy it more than I did, whether it was due to being outside the intended demographic or haven't had played competitive sports outside of school, but I found myself wanting to skim over the training sessions just to reach the more personal side of the storyline. Pip Harry was able to put me right into the action from the grassy banks of the river, and loved the Melbourne locations scattered throughout. Overall, it was a fascinating story of the lives of young athletes and the pressure of competitive sports, from an author who has experienced the life firsthand.
Profile Image for Rhondda.
228 reviews11 followers
May 12, 2015
An interesting book about the pressures placed on young people the world of elite school sport. Money and prestige play a big part in this rather insular world where winning seems all consuming.
This novel tells the story of Cristian and Leni Posescu who are twins on rowing scholarships. There are high expectations that they will perform well, partly because their parents are both medal winning Olympians and partly because they must maintain high performances to stay at the school. The pressure to do well and win the Head of the River eights, in both boys and girls sections, place almost unbearable pressures on both them and others in their circle.
The narrative unfolds with the voices of Cristian and Leni in alternating chapters as they explain their struggles. Each is trying create a balance in their lives whilst finding a place for study, working out their relationships as well as keeping up with the rigorous training regime in preparation for the final race. Each finds out that not everything can be achieved the way they want it to.
At the end of the novel, the love they have within their family, and the support they give to each other, leaves the reader with a positive impression of life beyond school.
Head of the River is not simply a novel about sport. It is about so much more. It is ultimately about friendship, growing up, relationships, identity, insecurities and anxieties when you are becoming an adult and family bonds. Sport is the mechanism but it is not an "issues" book.

An interview with the author about this books can be found at http://www.kids-bookreview.com/2014/1...

Profile Image for Charlotte (readwithchar).
189 reviews124 followers
December 30, 2018
A book with characters who are twins ✔

Wow! I absolutely loved this book, I could barely put it down.
I loved how the book started after The Head of the River took place, which gave a sense of foreboding when it went back to 6 months beforehand. you knew something bad was going to happen, but it was impossible to know what it was.

I loved reading a book based in Melbourne, as well as about I sport I love. I could imagine the scenes, based on my own experience rowing on the yarra, and I have my guesses about which schools mentioned are loosely based on actual schools.

The pressure Cristian and Leni are both under is immense, pressure they put on themselves, from their peers and also from their family, and how they dealt with it was quite different, with Leni obstinate to do well through hard work, and Cristian who succumbed to peer pressure to take the easy route. Leni also grew as a character throughout, from being serious and super focussed on her rowing that she couldn't also have trust and have fun with her crew, to opening herself up more to them with friendship and trust.

I loved reading this fast paced book, with relatable and believable characters!I was never bored, I always wanted to find out what was going to happen next. one of my favourite books so far this year!
37 reviews1 follower
August 2, 2014
A really good story overall. Although it took several attempts to start the novel, which is the reason it took me so long to read, but once you make it one fifth though the book it becomes hard to put down. I usually don't like dual narration as it interrupts the flow of the story, but Pip executed it well and I found myself wanting more. This is a book a young adults can relate to as they face rivalry and weight/self esteem issues as they enter the last couple of years of their high school life much like how the characters in the text find themselves. I received this book as a part of the first reads program
Profile Image for Trisha.
2,170 reviews118 followers
August 16, 2017
Took me ages to read this, mostly because of life, school and uni and what not, but also because I am not a fan of teenagers who make really bad decisions. It's just so hard to read. And Cristain's choices come from desperation, but he knows he's doing the wrong thing.

While Leni's dramas are nowhere near the depth of Cristian's, they are still interesting and well handled. I liked their closeness, although it does take half the book before I really felt that they had each other's back.

There's some sadness here, and it's well written and authentic. The open-ended resolutions are also realistic.

Moving and strong.
Profile Image for Kerri Jones.
2,029 reviews15 followers
July 31, 2015
This is one if the best YA books I've read well probably since the last one I gave five stars! But seriously, I loved the way this is written in perspectives of twins Christian and Leni and the subject matter of drugs in sport was fascinating. I felt the turmoil of the twins decisions because the writing was that good. Not everything ends well (you discover that in the first chapter) but the journey and the resolutions are authentic. There's some romance and teen angst that adds extra dimension and to top it all off it's set in Melbourne. Win!!
968 reviews
September 8, 2014
Pip Harry describes private school parental expectations very well. The setting is prefect with rich father bankrolling the use of steroids to ensure the rowing team wins. Story told alternatively by brother/sister twins - both in the firsts rowing team. As characters I prefer Cris, the brother who takes the drugs and is therefore the cheat, but is always there to support his sister. Leni , on the other hand, is not so likeable, has to learn how to be the Captain ie.e part of the team. Hope to read many more Pip Harry books
Profile Image for Carrie.
36 reviews1 follower
June 23, 2014
Loved this. It had a good heaping of heart and guts. Just like with her first book, Pip had me transported right back into my highschool self -all the good, the bad and the ugly! Was really well done technically - the alternating narration worked wonderfully in capturing all sides to the characters and the storylines. A ripper sophomore book from a great Aussie author who's really starting to make a name for herself. I'll be continuing to sing her praises for sure.
Profile Image for Marita.
65 reviews1 follower
January 11, 2015
A good, solid read. Fiction featuring rowing is unusual and this really is a book where the sport is integral to the story and treated realistically. Even better (and more unusual) is that it is set in a co-ed school and male and female stories are given equal billing. More similarities than differences, strangely enough. The story is told alternately by Leni and Cristian, twins and top rowers, and the children of rowing olympians. They are very different, however, and very real.
Profile Image for Zena Shapter.
Author 31 books52 followers
January 23, 2015
Proviso: Pip Harry is a friend of mine. That said, I wouldn't rate it here if I didn't like her book objectively. But I do. It's well-written, great pace, fascinating concept and fabulous execution.

What I loved most about the book is how it explores the *actual* reality of teenage pressure, romance and aspirations. Things *don't* always end well. Good job, Pip, you had me crying for the entire last 50 pages!
Profile Image for Andrea.
62 reviews
July 1, 2014
The teenage school rower in me I loving this book so hard for all of the memories it brings back. The librarian in me is loving this book for its honesty, fresh Australian voice and topics that aren't touched on all that often in teen novels such as the pressure of GPS sports and the financial divides at private schools.
Profile Image for Isabel.
47 reviews14 followers
July 7, 2014
Loved the dual narration, but I found it quite detached and almost clinical in parts of Leni's. I'm not sure if that was intentional because of the way that she was, or not, but either way I found in hard to connect to. However, I loved Leni and Cris's stories and bond. There were amazing other characters and a very interesting plot. Overall, I really enjoyed this book.
86 reviews1 follower
December 27, 2014
Rare for me to read about sport. I picked this up, hoping it would be good for a particular demographic in our school library. Didn't expect to love it so much. It's not just about sport, but I hate to use the term "coming of age"- isn't every story essentially about that? Well written characters, believable dialogue and a plot that kept me awake, sniffing, late into the night.
Profile Image for Padraig Byrne.
2 reviews
November 7, 2014
Another great YA novel from Pip Harry, set in the world of Melbourne private schools rowing. Loved the setting, the characters and the dialog. Highly recommend to those involved or interested in elite teen sports and the issues that arise around them.
Profile Image for Cynthia.
682 reviews29 followers
September 14, 2022
Phew. This book gave me a lot of conflicting emotions.

Head of the River is an incredibly accurate portrayal of what it's like to be a school rower. It never shies away from showing the good, the bad, and the ugly. I personally struggled at times to read this because of my own personal experiences in the sport. A huge part of myself loved rowing in high school, but reflecting back on it as an adult, it's hard to revisit the cult-like mentality. When you're rowing, your number one priority is rowing and all the long hours you put into getting stronger, faster, and better. You sacrifice so much of your own well-being, physically and emotionally. You're constantly thrown into situations where you are heavily pitted against your teammates to get into the best boat or the best erg scores, but then in the next moment you have to work completely synchronized with each other. It was very easy to relate to Cristian and Leni and their own personal struggles throughout the book. I felt like I was reading about myself in each of them, especially the parts about class differences, body issues, and trying to live up to high expectations. Overall, I think the book would get 5 stars alone for showing what it's like to be a rower. However, I struggled with some of the writing and creative choices at times so I knocked my rating down to reflect that.
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