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Inbetween Days

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At seventeen, Jacklin Bates is all grown up. She’s dropped out of school. She’s living with her runaway sister, Trudy, and she’s in secret, obsessive love with Luke, who doesn’t love her back. She’s stuck in Mobius—a dying town with the macabre suicide forest its only attraction—stuck working in the roadhouse and babysitting her boss’s demented father.

A stranger sets up camp in the forest and the boy next door returns; Jack’s father moves into the shed and her mother steps up her campaign to punish Jack for leaving, too. Trudy’s brilliant façade is cracking and Jack’s only friend, Astrid, has done something unforgivable.

Jack is losing everything, including her mind. As she struggles to hold onto the life she thought she wanted, Jack learns that growing up is complicated—and love might be the biggest mystery of all.

333 pages, Paperback

First published September 25, 2015

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Vikki Wakefield

10 books228 followers

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 77 reviews
Profile Image for ALPHAreader.
1,271 reviews
October 9, 2015
‘Inbetween Days’ is the new contemporary YA novel from Australian author, Vikki Wakefield.

It’s taken me so long to get around to writing a proper review of this book because a lot of crazy things have been happening lately and I’ve found myself getting so busy … I had to come back and do a re-read of Wakefield’s new gem before I could sit down to write a proper review, and in doing so I re-discovered a little slice of literary calm in the midst of my hectic waking life. A novel to take me completely out of myself; enjoying eating up Wakefield’s richly imagined small-town and the complex fighting character of Jacklin Bates – and I’m reminded all over again of what a captivating author Vikki Wakefield is.

‘Inbetween Days’ is about Jack, who has a complicated relationship with her sister and the boy she wants more from. Jack lives in a town that has a ‘suicide forest’, where people frequently go to die, and I particularly adored the town of Mobius – a setting that’s as rich and complex as the characters and impacts on them a lot. Mobius begs the question; what does it do to a town that’s a dead-end (literally) for so many people?

Morning arrived late to our town and night came early; it was ten by the time the sun made it over Pryor Ridge and around four when it ducked behind Mount Moon. Everything in Mobius stretched to reach the light: we built out houses on stilts, our trees grew tall and spindly, our shadows were long.

Now, tell me that little description doesn’t have the ring of Harper Lee to it?

Somehow, it was hotter then: a black dog suffered on a summer's day; bony mules hitched to Hoover carts flicked flies in the sweltering shade of the live oaks on the square. Men's stiff collars wilted by nine in the morning. Ladies bathed before noon, after their three o'clock naps, and by nightfall were like soft teacakes with frostings of sweat and sweet talcum.

(P.S. – that’s one of my all time favourite slices of writing, from ‘To Kill a Mockingbird’)

This novel has Vikki Wakefield covering a lot of new territory – a real break away from ‘Friday Brown’ and ‘All I Ever Wanted’. For one, she really delves into matters of “romance” which were glancing blows in her first two books – in ‘Inbetween Days’ there’s a love triangle of sorts (a very Vikki Wakefield triangle, to be sure) and I’ve got to say I particularly appreciated reading sexual politics being negotiated by Wakefield’s Jack, a young woman who is piecing together the difference between sexual desire and true intimacy.

I also loved the dynamic of Jack’s relationship to her sister, Trudy, who she has moved in with after dropping out of school. Mim in ‘All I Ever Wanted’ may have had some dubiously strapping older brothers, and Friday Brown had what started as an oddly sisterly-sick relationship with Arden, but in ‘Inbetween Days’ Wakefield really delves into this tricky familial bond with fascinating results;

Trudy lunged. She grabbed my arm and dragged me off the bed. I hit the floor, bellowing. Trudy hauled me up from behind, digging her fingers into my armpits and shoving me along in front of her like a sack of manure. At the bathroom door she gave me one hard shove. While I leaned over the basin, she ran the shower.
She elbowed me in, fully clothed, without waiting for the water to run hot.


I loved reading Jack and Trudy scenes – there’s something visceral in Wakefield’s writing them, I can practically taste the adrenaline when they corner each other like that.

But there are also many aspects to ‘Inbetween Days’ that make this a wholly beautiful Vikki Wakefield book. Like, for instance, the writing of marginalised characters from lower socio-economic backgrounds. I think when youth literature talks about ‘We Need Diverse Books’, it’s often racial and sexual diversity that gets talked about the most – but really all kinds of diverse characters are needed, and a rather insidious common portrayal of white middle-class characters often pervades youth lit. Wakefield doesn’t hold to that – she constantly challenges with her books. In all three she has written characters who are struggling – they don’t have a fixed address (like Friday and her mother) or they’re in constant trouble with the law (Mim’s family in ‘All I Ever Wanted’). This is explored again in ‘Inbetween Days’, with drop-out Jack whose regional town is dying so thoroughly that she finds herself without a job … Wakefield’s characters remain some of the truest and most vital to modern Australian young adult literature.

‘Inbetween Days’ is Australian gothic. It’s at times bleak and tender, with touches of romance threaded with heartache, all playing out in a town that’s dead and dying. As anyone who has read a Vikki Wakefield novel knows, it’s near impossible to completely summarise her stories; save to say it’s another ‘must-read’ from one of Australia’s best young adult authors writing today.
Profile Image for jesse.
1,115 reviews109 followers
September 4, 2023
I will always, always unconditionally love Vikki Wakefield's books like a lost girl in a desert finding a glass of fresh of water. What are the chances of finding something like that? You tell me.
Profile Image for Paula Weston.
Author 16 books858 followers
December 23, 2015
This is going to sound weird and a tad narcissistic, but I feel like Vikki Wakefield writes books just for me. This one in particular.

It’s like she’s crawled into my soul, found all my insecurities and all the things I didn’t like about myself as teenager and captured them in the wonderful mess that is Jack. And, as usual, she’s done it in a way that’s poetic and profound and beautifully written.

As with every Wakefield novel, the relationships all ring true - between siblings, lovers, parents and friends. There’s a rawness and an honesty that always blows me away with her writing. There's also laugh out loud dialogue and well-crafted metaphors, not to mention moments that left me teary (even on the second read).

Jack doesn’t always make good decisions, but that’s what makes her journey so authentic and her hard-earned moments of maturity so rewarding. And I don’t think I’ve ever wanted to hug a character as much as Jeremiah (even if he is a hulking giant who doesn’t like to be touched) - or punch someone as much as Luke, who was possibly a little too familiar.

One of the things I love most about this book is that, while it works brilliantly as contemporary YA, it also resonated with me as a nod to Gen-Xers and our obsession with leaving home.

Love this book. Highly recommended.
Profile Image for Cora Tea Party Princess.
1,323 reviews860 followers
November 24, 2016
5 Words: Family, friendship, resentment, love, growing-up.

This book very much sits on that fine line between YA and Adult fiction - as much as it's about growing up, that inbetween time when you aren't yet grown but are no longer a child, it is also written in a rather mature and slightly less accessible (for me) style.

I loved the small town mentality, how everything came back to it. I loved how the Jack seemed so trapped, how everyone seemed trapped, but that no one ever properly left. I loved how the characters themselves seemed as small as the setting.

I didn't really like Jack that much, and I struggled at first because of it, but I got sucked right in to her world. I was there witnessing the tumultuous relationships she had with everyone around her, I felt her resentment, I understood her actions. I loved how she interacted with her sister, how they weren't best friends, how they argued all of the time. I have sisters, and we are at each other's throats, so the relationship really rang true.

This book had a very summery feel to it, in the writing style itself as much as the summer setting, and at times I was reminded of Panic by Lauren Oliver.

I was provided with a copy free for review.
Profile Image for Lauren Lanz.
897 reviews308 followers
May 5, 2020
While In-between Days was far from the greatest contemporary I’ve read, it still had a lot to offer in terms of underlying messages.

Jacklin Bates is seventeen and searching for a way out. Her small town is suffocating the few people still residing there, and parental relations have become a touchy subject in Jack’s life. For these reasons, moving in with her older sister seems like a temporary relief. As Jacklin goes through heartbreak and feelings of hopelessness, she’ll have to rediscover what it means to truly live.

This book definitely had a lot of potential. The characters were introduced nicely, though many of them didn’t serve much purpose besides knowing the main character. I wish there was a bit more development on their behalf rather than having the focus rely so heavily on Jacklin. Sadly, it was only in the second half that I could really grasp the direction of this novel, and by that point I was having a hard time growing attached to the story.

Forgettable seems a good word for this book, as in the end I felt very lukewarm towards it all. The writing was nice, though not outstanding when compared to other contemporaries. This is by no means a bad book, it just could have done a lot more. I do think that a lot of people would enjoy it, though. Maybe it simply wasn’t for me.
Profile Image for Text Publishing.
713 reviews289 followers
February 10, 2017
Reading Age: 14+ Themes: Small-town coming-of-age story about friendship, escape and love.

Vikki Wakefield legions reassemble. There’s a new book to be read! This is another beautiful and poignant tale of rural adolescence from the author of CBCA Honour Book Friday Brown and All I Ever Wanted.

‘Wakefield has captured small-town life perfectly. There is the stifling sense of everyone knowing everyone, but also the boredom that comes from being a teenager with nowhere to go. In these claustrophobic conditions, she explores love, death and identity.’
Books+Publishing

‘A gritty, heartfelt read for teens and adult readers alike.’
Readings

‘Inbetween Days is Australian YA gothic. It’s at times bleak and tender, with touches of romance threaded with heartache, all playing out in a town that’s dead and dying. As anyone who has read a Vikki Wakefield novel knows, it’s near impossible to completely summarise her stories; save to say it’s another ‘must-read’ from one of Australia’s best young adult authors writing today.’
Alpha Reader

‘Intense and engaging…Highly recommended.’
Reading Time

‘Vikki Wakefield has done it again. She’s gone and taken my breath away with another exquisite book…This is the sort of writing everyone who doubts the power of YA should read. Without a doubt, Wakefield is one of Australia’s best writers.’
Unfinished Bookshelf

‘Vikki Wakefield writes stories that will break your heart.’
Readings

‘[Wakefield’s] characters are believable flawed and memorable and there are some good life lessons for young players.’
Otago Daily Times

‘Wakefield has never sounded more like Harper Lee, with poignant descriptions and on-point characterisations.’
Alpha Reader, Favourite Books of 2015

‘[Vikki Wakefield] proves again that she’s the mistress of YA twisted relationships and disturbed characters, all memorable, all sketched with compassion, wit and insight, the adults as well as teens.’
Ruth Starke, Australian Book Review, Books of the Year 2015

‘[Wakefield] gives her fictional landscape the same haunting quality that she achieved with her first novel, Friday Brown, and her writing is full of insight and feeling.’
Age/Sydney Morning Herald

‘An utterly gripping read with authentic, complicated and relatable characters.’
Age/Sydney Morning Herald, Best Children’s Books of 2015/b>

‘This tender story about the opportunities we are presented with, and what we do with them, is perfect reading for older teens and adults alike.’
Big Book Club

‘Memorable, intriguing, perceptive and often very funny, this is an unforgettable YA novel and a most unusual love story.’
Magpies

‘Wakefield’s writing is unflinchingly honest…readers who let themselves sink into Wakefield’s descriptions of small-town life, its constraints, and frustrations will enjoy following Jack as she searches for meaning, finding love and purpose in the unlikeliest people.’
Publisher’s Weekly
Profile Image for RitaSkeeter.
712 reviews
June 18, 2017
[4.5] I read a lot of YA and most of it is urban, so it was refreshing to see a different locale – in this case a small town in the Australian bush.

The book reminded me, in both tone and the bush setting, of Jasper Jones – except even better. The setting in this book is almost a character; the small town in its death throes and the subsequent lack of employment and opportunities for the young people that live there. It leads to two things in this book – they either leave or they drink for something to do.

This book is very much a character study – and I have to say the author captured teenage angst well. There were times I could have throttled the main character, so infuriating was she at times. But she felt like a real teenager. Not one of these wise beyond her years mini-adults that populate so many YA books, but a true to life (at times insufferable) teenager.

This can be a grim read at times, but it is saved from becoming depressing by two things. Firstly, by main character Jack . A pain in the arse, yes, but also a character you want to get ahead. You want her to have a future. The second is the humour. My favourite line came when Jack and her mother were talking and the mother was being a bit all carpe diem when she tells Jack;

Ma smoothed out her dress. ‘Because one day you’re hot in a string bikini and the next time you blink you’re Mrs Doubtfire’. She leaned over and took a beer, twisting the top off with her apron.

Hopefully I haven’t reached Mrs Doubtfire status yet, but I agree with the sentiment!

Ultimately this is a book with hope. Highly recommended.
Profile Image for Rosanne Hawke.
Author 60 books96 followers
November 2, 2015
Vikki Wakefield’s Inbetween Days
This is South Australian YA author Vikki Wakefield’s third novel. I also enjoyed her All I Ever Wanted and Friday Brown. This new title has an older feel even though main character Jack is seventeen. Jack is living with ‘runaway’ sister, Trudy and waiting for Luke to notice her, but it is Jeremiah who does, intelligent, quirky, kind Jeremiah. This novel is inhabited by very interesting people: Pope, who Jack is afraid has come to the forest to die, like so many others; Roly who is still traumatised from school bullying; Astrid who squeezes Jack out of a job; the demented father of the roadhouse owner who’s always trying to find his way back to the old drive in. Plus a mother with rough, tough love. The relationships are complex and rich with secrets that are finally realised before growth and nurturing can begin. This is an excellently written novel of a small Australian community. There are no cliches, no stereotypes: a novel of yearning, discovery and belonging. This is literary YA at its best.
Five stars!
PS: a note re audience for schools: this is probably one for the senior school as despite the YA age of the main character, most are older and some of the content borders on New Adult.
Profile Image for Trisha.
2,170 reviews118 followers
October 19, 2015
Vikki Wakefield’s third novel is just as intense and engaging as her previous two. Seventeen-year-old Jacklin Bates lives with her sister Trudy on the outskirts of their small country town, Mobius. She’s dropped out of high school, thinks she’s in love with a boy who is clearly using her, and is caught in between teen age and adulthood...

Read the rest of my review at Reading Time .

There's also a piece by Vikki about writing the book. It's eloquent and insightful.
Profile Image for Jayne Downes.
230 reviews2 followers
November 25, 2015
I found the story rather dark, Vikki Wakefield did a great job of creating the setting in the depressing small town of Möbius. It is a complex and well written story with plenty of imagery. A coming of age story about the choices a 17 year old girl makes as she gains independence.
Profile Image for Michelle.
171 reviews104 followers
Read
August 20, 2016
Vikki Wakefield has done it again. She’s gone and taken my breath away with another exquisite book. While it (thankfully) doesn’t have the soul-crushing heartbreak of Friday Brown, Inbetween Days is an equally gorgeous novel and has reinforced my love for Wakefield’s unforgettable prose.

As with Friday Brown, the hot, dry, stifling regional Australia setting is a character in its own right in Inbetween Days. The slow, almost suffocating, slightly macabre small-town of Mobius came to life so vividly on the page. Perhaps I found it easy to relate to because of the places I’ve lived and visited throughout Australia, but I think it’s more likely that Wakefield just perfectly captures settings, both urban (in Friday Brown) and remote. It goes beyond just describing a town. Wakefield perfectly captures the people, the oppressive weight of isolation and the inexplicable thought that adventure lies just beyond its limits.

It’s so hard to articulate my feelings for Inbetween Days because it’s just perfect. Not one word is wasted. Every emotion explored. Ever character a valuable addition to the story. Jack was brilliant. Sure of herself, yet continually confused. Struggling to make the break from home. Complex, yet so easy to relate to. But my favourite character, beyond any doubt, was Jeremiah. That sweet boy stole my heart.

It’s so incredibly difficult to explain my love for this novel, for Wakefield’s writing. It’s something everyone should experience. This is the sort of writing everyone who doubts the power of YA should read. Without a doubt, Wakefield is one of Australia’s best writers.

This review and many more can be found at The Unfinished Bookshelf.

Thank you to Text Publishing for providing a copy of the book for review.
Profile Image for Pauline .
779 reviews1 follower
October 5, 2015
This is the third novel by Australian author Vikki Wakefield. What is inspiring about Wakefield’s work is her skill in tapping into the issues that are fundamental to teens and she does not hold back in her depiction of small country town Australia. Reading this novel the inactivity, the unemployment, the lack of opportunity or motivation and hope is almost palpable. This story, the pace, the characters and the colloquialisms are quintessentially Australian. Seventeen year old Jack (Jacklin) has dropped out of school and is working at the local general store. After an argument with her parents she has moved in with her older sister with whom she has a love/hate sibling relationship. What gives this book its strength is the complex web of relationships and friendships between people in a small community, with hopes, dreams and aspirations of a better future. This is certainly a book for older readers as there is significant swearing and sexual references.
Profile Image for DonutKnow.
3,307 reviews48 followers
February 26, 2019
I loved it and hated it and then loved it again. There was just so much misery and then bits of love scattered through, but ultimately it felt inexplicably human.

Haha, it sounds like I’m talking in riddles, but even I found it hard to describe why I kept on reading this book, despite the sadness, pity and a bit of embarrassment I felt for the protagonist and her experiences throughout the novel.

I loved it though, and I think it boils down to the fact that life isn’t perfect and neither was Jack’s life, and regardless of all things shitty she still kept trucking on. I really admired that.
Profile Image for Ernie.
336 reviews8 followers
January 29, 2016
Vikki Wakefield's first YA novel Friday Brown was a CBCA Notable Book in 2013 and this second novel fulfills the promise shown then. Jacklin, the narrator has left school in year 11 and the writer's focus is not on bullying at school but the results of it later. In the dying country town of Mobius in Victoria, Jacklin hates herself for her constant inability to get on with her mother or her older sister or communicate successfully with the boys who either desire her for sex or friendship. Lurking outside the town is a state forest, notorious as a site for suicides, many of them recorded in notes left in bottles that hang in the tree near the carpark. This is near the place by the dam where the local youths swim and where Jacklin waits for Luke to have sex.
The story is set between the mystery at the dam where something is poisoning the marron and Jacklin's dilemma in these 'in between days', 'stuck between yesterday and tomorrow', sacked from her part time job at the supermarket and living with her sister in another house because she can't get on with her mother. 'Why can't anyone say what they mean?' she pleads. When her sister tells her that she needs to change after yet another Christmas day disaster where her 'hair trigger balance between rudeness and civility' results in her mother sending her out, Jacklin maintains that she can't change while her sister insists that she can and she should. If she can't forgive, can she understand?
Two boys in her year group at school, who also suffered bullying return to the town and renew their friendship while Jacklin also shows some hope by her other part time job caring for the demented father of her former boss. They all meet at the abandoned drive-in cinema on the edge of town and they might just be able to get it it working again.
Wakefield thoroughly engaged me with her characters that I cared about and the comparisons she offered as they each try to cope with problems of relationship both with parents and their own age group in that small town environment where people know all and see all and younger people cannot see the caring that is also present. This story of mothers and daughter, sisters, first love and the leaving of home also provides some surprises and not just from the older man who camps in the forest. Recommended for ages14 and upwards.
Profile Image for Diana-christie Biancardi.
1,839 reviews36 followers
June 1, 2017
I liked the main character's relationship with her mom. Her mom was funny.
Ma: "Tomorrow you should put that new license into action. Have some fun."
Jacklin: What? "Why?"
Ma: "Because one day you're hot in a string bikini, and the next time you blink you're Mrs. Doubtfire."

It had some really good writing, too: "I missed being happy at least half the time. I'd never noticed before, but rage sits under your ribs."

"Ma's weekly treatment and blow-dry--in all her years she'd never come out looking much different, just freshly sprayed and stiff with Mrs. Gates's signature hairspray, the Black Death, which gave off an odor that made me worry she'd go off like a firecracker if she strayed too close to fire."

"I went straight to my room and threw my stuff onto the bed. I put Ma's china bird on the windowsill. My mood plummeted further. The room was basically a coffin with graying paint and a stained ceiling. There was a foul smell in there, like something had died in the walls; it just needed shutters on the window and a plague of blowflies to make it the attic room from The Amityville Horror. I opened the window. The smell followed me back into the hall...
"I can't live like this," I said. "My room is possessed."
"It's quite possibly your own questionable hygiene," Trudy said...

There really wasn't any kind of plot. Just a story about a teen dropout who has an older sister she moves in with. Then she has flings with one guy who's not serious about her. There's another guy who loves her but she doesn't love him. I really liked the writing on scenery that it had being based in Australia.
Profile Image for Kylie Purdie.
439 reviews16 followers
June 15, 2016
This the second short listed book in the young adult category for the Australian Children's Book Council Book of the Year Award 2016. The complete short list can be viewed here. https://cbca.org.au/shortlist-2016
I didn't sink into this as easily as I did the other books on the list. This is the only one that took me longer than 48 hours to read. However it is one that has stayed with me after reading.
Vikki Wakefield provides a strong portrait of rural town Australia - a place slowly dying as it's young people move away. In the meantime, Jack is there, not sure what she wants to do, struggling to make connections with family and friends.
In fact it is Jack's relationships with a range of people that make this book. Her idolisation of her sister that is starting to taint with the reality of living with her, her estranged relationship with her parents, her attachment to a boy who's not that attached to her, her concern for Pope - the boy camped out in the bush behind Jack's house, a place notorious for suicides, her care of her employers elderly father suffering from dementia, her friendship with two old school mates who were misfits. All of these relationships and Jacks interactions with them give her depth and substance. It gives the reader something to hang onto and identify with. Jack is a teen struggling with what so many teens do - where do I fit in, what direction do I go and am I able to be loved - and while not all of these questions are answered by the end of the book, there is hope that she is on her way to finding her place in the world.
521 reviews5 followers
July 11, 2016
Wakefield portrays young adult angst in a raw, and at times, provocative way. The relationships and romances in this book are deftly described and certainly not childlike. This is a young woman attempting to find her place in the world and making lots of mistakes along the way. A difficult family set-up, fraught relationship with her sister, and a mixture of friendships both passing and lasting make this a complex story in many ways. Throw in life in a small country town and you have quite a gripping read. Certainly one for older readers of YA.
Profile Image for Bianca.
322 reviews25 followers
November 3, 2015
This is probably my least favourite book from Wakefield so far, but seeing as it is still a Wakefield story, it was brilliant. The plot in this novel seemed very abstract for a lot of the story and the ending far from gave me the closure I needed.

However, I feel very attached to this book right now. Jack, Gypsy, Trudy, Jeremiah, Roly, Meredith...Such an amazing diverse group of characters who truly made this story.
Definitely a great story of self discovery.

Profile Image for Emma.
93 reviews19 followers
November 10, 2018
I really like the way this book presented self-sabotage in a way that people could relate to.
You cant help but instantly like the flawed and fucked-up characters that Wakefield writes.

Really enjoyed this book 👍
Profile Image for Kirsti.
35 reviews
February 23, 2018
A coming of age novel that has a simple but thought provoking story line.
Profile Image for Carolyn Gilpin.
Author 1 book16 followers
February 7, 2017
Jacklin lives in a very small town, overshadowed by mountains & a forest where people come to end their lives.
Meanwhile, Jack is trying to kickstart her own life - leaving school to work a part-time job, moving in with her newly-returned older sister, & having a fling with an older boy from the next town.

It's that time between leaving school & starting the rest of your life. Jack thinks she’s living but she’s in limbo, waiting for Luke to love her.

Jack is quite independent and fierce. In that way she was like Mim in ‘All I Ever Wanted’, except Mim was tougher yet ‘behaved’ better, trying to stick by her rules. Jack is behaving badly by leaving school, living with her sister, not seeing her parents, and having sex, yet she is a good caring person in many ways, who notices a lot of details about other people. She's just confused and making mistakes a lot - a very teenage thing to do. A great character!

When Luke doesn't come to meet her at 'their spot' one day, Jack goes off on a trail of rebellion and mistakes. But I love that she does this while still caring for people - Mr Broadbent with his dementia, and Pope, the guy camping in the woods, whom Jack is convinced has come to kill himself. And she tries her best to care for her old dog Gypsy, and the stray cat who won't let anybody near him.

The narrative is interesting in that the reader gets things revealed to us slowly by Jack, such as the truth about her Ma & Dad, and the complex relatonship between Jack, older sister Trudy and their mother. At first you think you know why the girls left home, but there's more to it.

Gosh, so many amazing characters - like many small towns, everyone knows each other and everyone's a little mad. I can't not mention the wonderful Jeremiah, returned to look after his mother while she recovers from her stay in a psych ward. In some ways big, solid, dependable and strong, yet in others vulnerable, frustrating in his almost-autistic way of seeing things. Jack has to be careful how she speaks to him and treats him, and I was on tenterhooks hoping she wouldn't hurt him.

So many truths were revealed along the way, even the realisation that the townsfolk were on the whole more caring than they first appear. Even Jake is not an awful guy - he was actually more honest with Jack in what he wanted from their 'relationship', than she was with him.

This is a gritty yet tender and novel (I'm beginning to think that's Wakefield's specialty!) that captures beautifully much of the confusion and murkiness of a teenager doing her best, stuffing things up, and learning as she goes.

I do love Wakefield's style, with her unique turn of phrase, and people who swear and hurt each other and do the wrong thing, but also show unexpected kindessnesses. She is never boring, even when the characters are seemingly going nowhere!

I particularly loved the last line, ‘I started from there.’
Profile Image for Readingee.
168 reviews
February 6, 2016
I have two words to support my reasoning for my two stars for this novel: too sad. It's a simple as that, I felt like the whole novel was just documenting the life of this depressing town, it's small population and basically how difficult life was because of the limited opportunities available.

Jack could be a described as a teenager wise beyond her years, however only in certain aspects of her life; for the most part she seemed like a troubled teenager, who was lost and needed to be found. Honestly, hearing about her life was depressing and frustrating to say the least, she was stubborn and failed to learn from experiences in her life.

Apart from that, another explanation for my two stars was the fact that I didn't find this novel very engaging, I kept sort of drifting in and out of it, I would remain engaged for a few minutes and then afterwards I would just be staring blankly at the words, reading it but not taking any of it in. Sometimes I would read something, and then a couple of chapters later I realised that they would be discussing something significant occurred previously and I had no idea what was going on.

I was missing such large chunks of the novel, simply because I was disinterested. Sometimes for me I have a slow start to novels, but then I pick up the pace when it gets exciting or intense - but this novel delivered neither of those aspects.

I have a lot of respect for Vikki Wakefield, but this novel I simply didn't enjoy.
Profile Image for Miffy.
400 reviews26 followers
September 13, 2016
Jacklin/ Jack is on the cusp of adulthood. At seventeen she still has a foot in both camps. Desperate to be independent, she is also incredibly naive, and desperately searching for love - in all the wrong places.
Set in the fictional yet familiar town of Mobius, Jack's claustrophobic life begins to unravel. She has been stuck in a rut since she left school and home, unable to move beyond the world of her work at the Bent Bowl Spoon roadhouse, her lust for aloof Luke, and the hero-worship of her older sister, Trudy. Jack is finding it hard to make any decision that doesn't hurt either herself or others, and although she can see the train wrecks coming, she seems to be powerless to stop herself and the hurt she leaves in her wake.

I really enjoyed Inbetween Days, evidenced by my finishing it in a day. All of the main characters are multi-dimensional: flawed, endearing, infuriating, and loveable. Some of the minor characters are a bit sketchy - Roly is your typical jilted friend and Jack's dad is probably the weakest of the main players - but no-one is really out of place; each has a part to play. This is a polished effort, exploring big themes with an authentic teenage voice.

A coming-of-age novel that REALLY speaks to that theme, in my opinion, Vikki's best yet. Highly recommended.
Profile Image for Bianca.
653 reviews1 follower
November 1, 2018
Love is a pie. It’s something you put your whole heart into. You stand on his doorstep and you offer him this pie that you have baked tenderly, and he picks at the crust, maybe takes a bite, then he gives you back the pie and says, “I don’t like this pie. I don’t want your pie.” And you’re left with a pie that will never be perfect again. The next time you offer your pie to someone, they know someone else has already taken a bite. Maybe all the filling is gone and you only have soggy pastry to offer. In return, all you get is someone else’s half-eaten pie because that’s all you deserve when that’s all you have to trade. Or you get someone else’s perfect pie but, by then, you’re partial to half-eaten pie, so you fuck up their pie and move on. First love is a show pie. Every love after it is a reheated delicatessen pie and it tastes like shit, because you remember what first pie tastes like and it’ll never be the same again. So, now you’ve learned to protect your pie and you’ll never make the mistake of holding it out with both hands again—now you’ll offer your half-eaten pie with one hand, while the other hand will stay behind your back, holding a fork.


— A great coming-of-age story about finding hope in a world that's trapping you in, and how facing things instead of running away is what it means to truly escape.
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280 reviews
September 17, 2016
I love Vikki Wakefield.

There's something lackadaisical about reading her novels. They're the sort of stories you can kick back, feet up, outside on a breezy evening, and just slip into. And you find yourself inside her small towns, her balmy summer nights, her buzzing forests, just comfortably like you fit there. And every now and again she gives you this little pinch, or just squeezes your heart a bit, because these characters aren't going through these life-threatening, hair raising, catastrophic dramas, but their... 'little' - as in, the scope of their worries are very... contained - but still they tug at your heartstrings...

And in so many ways, I'm nothing like Jack, I guess our circumstances are so far apart. But there are so many instances I would find myself reading the same passage or quote or moment over and over again, and just thinking, Yes. I know. I feel like Vikki Wakefield's novels, thus far, have this rough around the edges kind of beautiful. She offers easy escape and a quiet empathy. I just feel... content. Don't think I can say anymore.
36 reviews4 followers
August 23, 2015
Being a huge Vikki Wakefield fan I was keen to read her 3rd book In between days when my ARC arrived in my dropbox. While I didn't find this quite as incredible as her first two books, Vikki sure knows how to get to the core of what are the important questions of many teenagers.
Seventeen year old Jacklin (Jack) lives in a dying small country town renting with her recently returned, after a three year absence/holiday, older sister, Trudy.
She works in and then loses her job at the local general store, due to a lack of customers.
Her parents live in town but she hardly speaks to them, and they in turn hardly speak to each other. She has far too much hope for her make-out interest, Luke, and maybe not enough for Jeremiah who wants to give her his heart.
Jack's such a gritty character although sometimes unsure and vulnerable that you just want her to find her place in the world. But, it's the relationships between her and all the other characters that make this book so readable.
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