I rarely read YA novels because I usually find them somewhat underwhelming, however Troublemakers is a contemporary coming of age story that well and truly lives up to its billing! In short, it is a superior example of this genre, driven by some well-fleshed out, bold characters and sparkles with humour, wit and spirit. Protagonist, fifteen-year-old Alena (Lena) Kennedy, has lived with her brother, Danny, and his boyfriend, Nick, in a flat in Hackney, East London, since she was three-years-old and her mother died. With twenty-years between Alena and Danny, together with Nick they have spent the last twelve-years in a stable family unit and Alena views both men as integral to her life, although it is Danny who is her legal guardian. Unflappable Nick runs an ethical coffee shop and is laid-back, patient and considerate. Danny, however, is almost his exact opposite, from his constant worrying about safety, providing a stable income through to his responsibility for setting a positive example for Alena. Despite both siblings having shared a mother in Heather Kennedy, Danny’s unresolved grief and anger sees him close down and refuse to be drawn when Alena suddenly starts to ask about their mother and her early years. But why are Danny’s memories so off-limits and why does Alena, even more worrying, have none of her own memories to treasure? Increasingly frustrated with Danny’s short-temper and attitude, Alena discreetly probes their mother's belongings that are kept in a storage locker and her industrious efforts on the internet see her uncover more about a woman she quickly comes to realise was a passionate and committed political activist. However the appearance of the “East End bomber”, a white man leaving a series of improvised explosive devices in the supermarkets around East London, sees the threat of terror encroaching on all their lives, with the unknown motive of the bomber fuelling hostility.
As Danny starts to fret about keeping his family safe, it is his acceptance of a job working on the campaign of independent outsider for Mayor, the ultraconservative and vehemently right-wing, Jacob Carlisle, that sees the first cracks appearing in their harmonious household. As Nick’s animosity and his evident belief that Carlisle’s popularity surge is the result of his campaigns opportunistic pandering to citizens fears, Danny becomes public enemy number one in the flat. Combined with Alena’s political awakening, inspired by a mother she is slowly starting to idolise, when she finds herself presented with an opportunity to not only change the future of her city, but to transform her family life the fallout has the potential to alter everything. However, with two sides to every story, has she just destroyed everything that she valued and the only family unit that she can remember? And can she ever repair the life she once took for granted when, “everything about my life is different because what I thought I’d lost it turns out I never had.” Alena, is a slightly awkward intelligent teenager, a typical outsider in her school community where her and her two friends, Teagan and Ollie, are set apart by their individuality. They do their own thing, are mature and have well considered opinions, all with dramatically different situations at home to contend with, from Ollie’s missing brother, to Teagan’s overly keen to be involved parents.
This should be required reading on the UK National Curriculum for its remarkably insightful commentary on just what living in a democracy means and why teenagers today should care and want to get involved. Compassionate, incredibly humorous with an emphasis on inclusivity and tolerance, Troublemakers is a clever and fascinating story that explores what family means to fifteen-year-old Alena Kennedy and the influence of politics on her unusual family unit. Barter does not limit the scope of this novel, which touches on unexplored grief and coming to terms and understanding our origins. As Alena comes to realise that Danny had her best interests at heart, her fierce intelligence sees her coming to understand and appreciate the many decisions that can change the course of a person's life along the way and the complicated world we live in. Undoubtedly the best YA novel that I have read in several years, showcasing a perceptive author who pitches this perfectly for an intelligent YA audience with a storyline that will give every adult serious food for thought. Troublemakers is an ambitious YA novel with real depth that considers everything from terrorist activity, morals and the many varieties of family life. From Greenham Common right through to the diverse community of London in 2017, this multi-layered novel is an utter joy to read and addresses it's readership with honesty and an appreciation of their capacity to quantify subjects that have formerly been considered adult territory.
Troublemakers is a meticulously well-plotted novel and Catherine Barter’s finely nuanced story shows that the world we live in today is much less black and white than in the past. Yes, the world is a brutal and frequently hostile place and we may not be able to change everything, but we can change some of the things and it is imperative that we don’t lose sight of these and all exercise our democratic right without redress to violence. A cracking YA novel that for once doesn’t start and finish at an angst ridden and sentimental portrayal of first love! An excellent debut from an author that I am very keen to read more of.