14 year old McKay Medgar Tambo is the narrator of this friendship story - set in the 'badlands' of contemporary London. South Crongton is meant to be Brixton, I suspect; or at least Brixton-like. This is a world of gangs - with hood-rats who will jack your phone, and proper gangsters who carry weapons, nurse grudges and jealously guard their territory and reputations.
McKay is a sweet kid who absolutely loves his grub. He'd really like to be in the cooking club at school, learning how to perfect his cakes, but he's not quite secure enough for that. He's got two best friends, Jonah and 'Liccle Bit', and a wannabe 'Boy from the Hills' who wants to hang out with them. He also has an older brother called Nesta and a widowed father. McKay's mother has died in some accidental and violent way, and none of the men in the family have even begun to get over it yet. They are all still mourning in different ways, and both Nesta (because of his temper) and his father (because of his gambling problem) bring trouble to McKay's door.
The main action of the story involves McKay's gang of friends attempting to recover the phone of Venetia from an unsavoury older boyfriend. Of course everything goes wrong and they get in a world of trouble, but in the end, friendship prevails and McKay's family rally and come together in a positive way. The point of this story is the VOICE, which I loved. McKay and his friends talk in this Caribbean-inflected 'street' lingo, and I found the vocabulary and the rhythms of it hugely entertaining and appealing. Despite the often grim subject matter, I laughed at many points in the book - and McKay mostly keeps it light. His obsession with food is a constant focus, and a welcome counterpart to the uglier aspects of race, poverty and criminality touched on in the storyline.
I would have never read this book had it not been shortlisted for the 2017 YA Book Prize, but it was a delightful surprise.