“A searing portrait of political & personal desperation,” (Andrea Lawlor), Plum's State Champ is a protest novel for our times. A Jezebel Book Club Pick
A high-school state champion runner turned college dropout, Angela is working as a receptionist at an abortion clinic when a “heartbeat law” criminalizes most abortions statewide. In the ensuing upheaval, her boss is arrested for providing illegal procedures and the clinic is shut down.
Angela has never been either an activist or a model employee. But she gets why her boss didn't follow the rules. She decides to go on a hunger strike in the boarded-up clinic, to protest her boss's arrest and everything that's been lost. She'll draw on her the masochistic discipline of a runner, a history of self-destructive behavior, and a willingness to sleep on exam room tables (whose hygienic paper she uses as her diary).
Angela's protest is solitary, enraged, and a little messy, but it mobilizes a group of people around her-an ex who's a local journalist looking for a good story, the everyday people the clinic once served, and most especially a formidable anti-abortion activist named Janine.
Lucid, strange, and deeply metal, State Champ cuts through the political rhetoric to explore the relationship between bodily autonomy and real freedom. Angela's story is about what abortion access means day-to-day and how much we are-in ways that can transform us-responsible for one another.
This gloriously devastating novel grabbed me by the throat and never let go. Timely and prescient, this issue-driven story is grounded in the specificity of a hard-core narrator whose personal losses in life are measured against her one big win as high school state long distance running champ. The reader is brought relentlessly along when the narrator stages a hunger strike to draw attention to the cruelty of restrictive abortion laws and the imprisonment of the doctor whose example of sacrifice inspires her. Empathetic, enraging, and gloriously written, Hilary Plum has given us a perceptive portrait of our dystopian present.
Where's the red line, sheeple? STATE CHAMP knows. A defiant punk voice, fucked up and bristling from defeats, growls her barbed protest song, so vivid and direct you can't tell when its ragged refusals transform into the limpid melodic rill of exit music and fight song. Hilary Plum has composed an athletic, poised, and complex fury, knowing of the body and leavened with foils, to remind us how to take a stand.
This book was marketed as "ferocious and hilarious," but I found it to be neither. While I was initially drawn to the compelling premise—a young adult taking over an abortion clinic to protest her boss's arrest—the execution left me unsatisfied.
What should have been a sharp commentary on bodily autonomy instead devolved into a troubling portrayal of disordered eating. The book presents a fundamental contradiction: Angela stages a "hunger strike" for bodily autonomy while seemingly driven by her history with disordered eating. This raises uncomfortable questions about whether the narrative is genuinely exploring protest or simply rebranding self-harm as activism. Calling it a hunger strike feels disingenuous when the protagonist's relationship with food is clearly complicated by mental health issues.
The structure—a journal written in second person, initially addressing a former hookup who's also a reporter—creates an interesting intimacy but ultimately serves a story that goes nowhere. Angela is undeniably a realistic, flawed character whose rants about abortion rights are genuinely thought-provoking, but these moments of clarity get buried under the weight of an unfocused narrative.
Angela emerges as someone desperately trying to save her imprisoned boss when she should be focused on saving herself. She's a college dropout, generally angry and directionless, yet the book never meaningfully addresses her underlying issues. The ending compounds this problem: she survives her protest but remains homeless, aimless, and fundamentally unchanged. There is little mention at the end of the book of the doctor she was trying to help; obviously, she is not freed from prison by a young adult's "hunger strike," which makes the entire ordeal feel pointless.
The book reads like two separate stories awkwardly merged—a political protest novel and a mental health crisis narrative—with neither receiving the attention it deserves. The author's intended message about reproductive rights gets lost in the confusion, and what could have been a powerful statement becomes a missed opportunity. The only redeeming qualities were its brevity and the fact that it was free (thanks Libro.fm).
quite tough to read at points but mostly i was just mad and disappointed that i didn’t write this — the author is also a poet and ran for amherst…probs why i had my workshop hat on while reading this but really just in awe from a craft perspective. does some really smart and amazing things with politics and language beyond the obvious plot level. going to be thinking about this one for a while.
This novel defies categorization. It's almost a bizarre cross between Shadow Tag and How to Blow Up a Pipeline, or a desperate epistolary novel on speed. Angela, our narrator and main character, has a voice that is utterly devastating, urgent, and strong. I empathized so much with her struggles big and small - her college coach's pressure on weight ultimately drove Angela to illness and dropping out; she also faces judgment from people who call her "too blunt." (She gave me spectrum vibes, but that's me.) Angela is clear-eyed in her protest after her boss has been imprisoned for providing abortions that have recently been criminalized in their rust-belt state. She reasons that she can't do much, but a hunger strike is one thing she knows how to do. The way that Angela deteriorates as the weeks stretch on is reflected in how her journal (ie the novel) becomes increasingly disjointed. And yet, as she is writing in this survival mode, it allows us to see the truth more clearly than ever. I finished the book in two days, was sobbing through the last fifty pages, and have been telling everyone I know to preorder. In short, Hilary Plum has shaken me to my core yet again. Everyone needs to read this novel. Thank you so much to Bloomsbury for sending me the ARC; available May 13!
"To do something scary you just need to be more scared of something else."
This book is not my usual read, but something about it called to me, and I'm glad it did.
Angela is a past cross country state champion, a college dropout, the receiver of multiple DUIs, and most recently, a receptionist at an abortion clinic. When the clinic is closed and the Doctor who worked there is arrested for violating the new heartbeat law, Angela moves into the clinic and goes on a hunger strike until Dr. M is freed.
State Champ is written from Angela's POV during her days on the hunger strike in the clinic, so it is very stream of consciousness, and as her health deteriorates not all the thoughts are complete, or make sense, but they are so raw and visceral.
"I don't know how praying works. I guess people don't need, like, consent.
Next time, if there's a next time, I should tell her praying about me isn't praying for me. If you were praying for me, you'd be trying to want what I want. In a real prayer you'd offer to switch places with someone. You'd see it clearly, like god POV, where anyone could be anyone, like we all could picture a big switcheroo."
Angela is so unapologetically herself that I couldn't help but adore her. She felt like a real person who had messed up a lot, and struggled and was trying her best. I raced through this book is two days and if it had been longer I would have happily kept reading. This probably won't be for everybody, but I hope the readers who pick it up adore it as much as I did.
Passionate, messy, angry, provocative…that’s both the novel and its complicated-but-often-hilarious protagonist/narrator (the book is often very funny, not what you expect from a story about abortion, abortion rights, and an anorexic hunger striker). That the supporting cast of characters consists of mostly heroic women (with one obvious exception) and seriously shitty men (no exceptions) seems too predictable, but is probably just realistic (unfortunate but true). This is a very quick read, but it packs a punch…and, despite the humor and sometimes irreverent tone, at its core it’s deadly serious. I’m glad to have read it.
somewhere between three and four stars, but bumping it up because i think it's playing around with a lot of interesting ideas. i'm not sure it fully works - it's more voice than an actual character, and there are times when it feels like it's also trying to do too much. but it gets at the issues of bodily autonomy and the very specific, scary time we're in very well. smart and thought-provoking!
So funny and punchy in a way that I couldn’t put down— but also such a profound meditation on what we owe to each other and the messiness of morality. Wow.
This book was ok, but I wish there was more of an outcome. I honestly don't really understand what happened at the end and I read the last 50 pages three times. Some of this was due to the writing style of the book, which I found highly annoying. The story is told from the POV of Angela, a college dropout and general all around pissy screw-up, who almost on a whim, decides to stage a hunger strike to protest the prison sentence of her boss. I can understand why the author chose to use run on sentences, and thoughts that changed direction right in their middle, and stories that went nowhere. The book is a journal that Angela keeps while staging her protest, and it makes sense that the further she goes, the more disjointed the narrative becomes. You are watching her starve in real time, after all. However, that means that the story makes no sense, and some of the points the author seems to be trying to make through her characters don't come across very well, or at all. I think there was a lot of illusions to Angela's real motives, like was she giving herself a public suicide? I think there was some reference to the people who might have better motives, but who don't really stand up for what they believe in? Who knows, since the point kept getting muddled.
I would like to read some of the book mentioned in the author's acknowledgement though. Those sound way more interesting than this book.
guyyysssss i haven't read a book in so long i'm embarrassed. idk what happened i started the year off so strong then became illiterate? and for some reason this randomista book is my grand return? anyway this book is very strange, a little funny, and ultimately devastating in all ways. it is the diary of a fucked up, not so likeable girl / former state running champ turned apathetic abortion clinic receptionist as she goes on a hunger strike nobody asked for when her boss is arrested for providing abortions under strict new laws. you watch her descend into near-death madness and the writing becomes a scattered form of half-poetry, which is not really meaningful in its content as much as the sad state of her thought process itself. the whole thing feels eerily ominous for OBVIOUS reasons and was absolutely unlike anything i've ever read. i think the point of reading it is the inevitable discomfort which is initiated by the unjust circumstances and maximized by the bizarre protagonist and her alienation of those around her. i enjoyed and am glad i read it but wouldn't recommend for those looking for ya know.... an actual story.....
I really wanted to love this one - especially since it tackles such heavy and important topics that I don’t usually go for in fiction. As someone who is pro choice and frustrated with the direction our country is heading when it comes to women’s rights, the synopsis immediately caught my attention.
The story is unapologetic and intentionally messy, told through the journal of a woman on a hunger strike in protest of abortion bans. And while I appreciate the urgency and boldness of the concept, the writing style made it hard for me to stay connected. The narrative feels intentionally disjointed (as it should since she begins hallucinating) but it left me feeling more distant than invested if that makes sense.
That said, I’m glad books like this are being written. Even when the execution doesn’t fully land, the why behind it still matters.
Big thanks to Bloomsbury and Libro.FM for the gifted ARC and ALC.
Interesting book. I was hesitant to read this thinking it would be overly preachy. I’ve read enough Christian fiction in my day to be scared of fiction with an overtly polemical tone. But, the whole abortion stuff is sort of secondary. The book is clearly unapologetically pro-abortion, don’t get me wrong, but it isn’t, like, *the* point. At least how I read it. The point is this stream of consciousness journaling style that takes you into the mind of this unlikely activist. We see her processing her actions and the reasons behind them, how she relates to anti-abortion activists, thoughts on cockroaches, journalism, love, sex, protests, her past, and everything.
I could totally see myself rereading this in a couple years and really loving it, but despite enjoying portions of it quite a lot, I left the work feeling fairly meh.
I received an advance copy of this book. Thank you
This book didn't really grab me, and you know what, that's ok, there are thousands of writers out there, each with their own style, and one size does fit all. I thought this book would engage me since I feel strongly about the topic. In the description it says: "Lucid, strange, and deeply mental, State Champ cuts through the political rhetoric to explore the relationship between bodily autonomy and real freedom" I'll give it "strange" but hardly Lucid and didn't feel it cut through anything. I found it rambled, which makes sense as the character is progressing with her hunger strike, but the rambling left me feeling disconnected.
I am sure there will be readers who connect with the book.
I hated this book. I hated the narrator; I hated the writing style; I hated all the characters. Most of all I hated that it tried too hard.
The book was promoted to be about reproductive rights, but then it was about parental loss, then it was about the legal system, then it was about substance abuse, then it was about eating disorders, then it was about hookup culture, then it was about police brutality, then it was about journalism, and I think at the end there may have been something about animal rights? (I don’t know; I was flipping through the pages pretty quickly by that point.) There were too many ideas shoved into a surprisingly dull story.
I love a flawed protagonist or unreliable narrator, but I really wanted this one die at the end.
4.5 rounded up. Loved the very voice-y POV and Angela as our narrator and unlikely (and often unlikeable) hero. I liked that Angela was a messy person with a messy backstory just trying to do what she could up against this impossible problem — that felt very real and timely. Loved the reveal about where she got the name Rose from. Everything about running/being a former athlete was very resonant. I enjoyed how as the hunger strike took its toll, Angela's writing deteriorated from prose into fragments, but I do think this made the ending action a bit hard to parse — what exactly happened and its impact all felt rushed compared to the relative weight of events. The later chapters reminded me a lot of Open Throat by Henry Hoke, which I enjoyed as well.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Angela was a high school state champion in track. Due to some bad decisions and alcohol issues, Angela lost her way. Now, as a young woman she works at an abortion clinic, still trying to get her life together. When her boss, the leading doctor at the clinic, is arrested after a new “heartbeat law” has been passed, Angela decides to hold a hunger strike in retaliation to the arrest. She does this in the shuttered clinic, quickly building support by the community. Not always an easy read, as the turmoil in Angela’s mind is expressed in bitterness and anger but I ended up finding it a rewarding and timely novel.
This book is unapologetically pro-abortion in a way I found refreshing. It's also deeply weird. The entire story is told through the journal entries of a messy young woman as she stages an equally messy hunger strike to protest abortion restrictions. It starts on the unhinged side and gets gradually less coherent as the narrator's health and mental status deteriorate. There are moments of dark humor and also of real clarity and humanity. The stream-of-consciousness style won't work for everyone (I'm not even sure it always worked for me), but I think a lot of people will resonate with the concept of being so mad that you feel insane.
A review written by the mother of the author may not be worth much. However, this is a tour de force. The novel takes on some fundamental and heart-breaking divisions in our social fabric and embodies them, makes them personal. When I put this on my "women" shelf it is because there is so much about every American woman's life in it. And even if you feel like you haven't lived any part of early success then failure, a workplace that is designed to demean, daily encounters with tragic women's lives, and hatred directed at the self, you should read this book! Some people are trying to save others. You may be surprised who they are.
So, wow, this was not the kind of book I was expecting, but I also only kind of skimmed the inside of the book jacket.
The main character, Angela. I felt for her and also felt like I didn't fully understand her choices, but that was okay because it felt like she didn't fully understand her choices either. And I actually really liked that. The world out there is unforgiving and it's easy to feel powerless and try and do something, and she wanted to try and do *something.* All her past-self introspections reveal more about what the clinic shut down means or could mean. I'll be thinking about this one for awhile.
Our narrator, Angela, is everything unlikeable in the way any chaotic twenty something would be. So much of her life story is chaos of her own making and she only shows us things partially because she's the one telling us. At times she is incredibly frustrating, but most of the time I just wanted to hug her. Who better to lead us through the chaos of the fight for autonomy than a woman who can barely keep herself together? Angela was a mess and so is the fight for bodily autonomy. This was messy, gross, and beautiful and the audiobook really took you into the atmosphere of the story.
I really loved the concept of this and think it’s well-written. It discusses big issues today: abortion, rights being taken away from us, protesting, eating disorders, and more. I found the relationship between the protagonist and her situationship (idk what else to call it lol) to be a really interesting dynamic as well! I feel like the book ended REALLY abruptly though. I was literally listening and the end credits came on and I was so confused! Anyway, thanks Libro.fm for the ALC even though I read it late!
I almost immediately returned it because I thought I would be too depressed to get through the whole book, but decided to try a little of it since it is short anyway. Totally loved it, and so happy to see new firmly pro-choice media. Somehow, even though it seemed very real, the story also felt encouraging in this horrible world seemingly intent on constantly punishing women. There is something about the writing style that was really enjoyable even though under most circumstances I like more concrete storytelling.