Set in late 60s Northern California, Bridgetown High follows a select group of teenagers throughout a year in their lives in the city of Richmond. The in media res start of the plot makes the story immediately interesting and compelling. Revenge and love are the main driving forces throughout the story, along with a few talks of the Johnson era, communism, and the Vietnam War.
The dialogue is speckled with dialect that makes the speech in itself a bit unbelievable but serves to exacerbate the characters’ unique personalities and set the story in time. The narrative jumps between different points of view to provide an omniscient perspective for the audience.
The main character, Mark Wilkerson, survives a car wreck on top of the Carquinez Bridge that kills his parents and baby sister, leaving behind just him and his sister, Amy. They are forced to move to Richmond to live with his grandmother and be near his Aunt Beatrice, Uncle Jack, and his cousin, Gary Taylor, the last remaining family. Mark remembers nothing of the wreck but is determined to find out who was driving the car that caused the accident and claims he will get vengeance.
But his life changes in this new high school, Bridgetown High, where he meets the head cheerleader, Charisse Davis, the school’s “cute girl”, Genie Lombardi, and the two troublemakers and local bullies, Bobby Baker and antagonist Jeff Marino.
What ensues is a pursuit for teenage love, including rivalries, swing dancing, lies and threats, and an eventual deathly rivalry between Mark, who thinks Jeff is responsible for the car wreck that turned his life upside down, and Jeff, who blames Mark for the negative things in his life. The rivalry culminates in drugs, alcohol, a gun, and the Carquinez Bridge, where Mark, Genie, Gary, and Jeff all face the end of their plight.
The rug is swept under the reader at the end of the book when the big finale not only reveals who is the culprit responsible for the death of Mark’s family, but also the inevitable fate of one of Mark’s love interest, Genie Lombardi.
Quick paced and full of turns, this YA romantic historical novel will captivate the reader and raise questions well after the book is over.
Ximena Blanco
Apex Reviews