Thank you, NetGalley, Disney Publishing Worldwide and Freeform, for the chance to read and review this book!
TW: sexism, sexual harrassment, violence, homophobia
After getting kicked off the basketball team for a fight, Mara has to prove to her coach that she can be a team player, so she decides to join the football team, along with her brother and her best friend Quinn, discovering she's a natural. But other girls decide to join the team and soon her choice becomes a politcal statement, triggering a chain of events in her small Oregon town and in her family and friends. Things are even more complicated since Mara's crush, Valentina, is now part of the team, and so is her nemesis, Carly. Soon the football team is divided between girls and boys and those who accept them and those who are willing to do anything in their power to kick them out.
Mara has to face herself, her family and the people to be who she is and do what she loves.
I loved reading Like other girls, Mara is a fantastic and complex main character and she was forced to face her preconceptions about gender, sport, sexuality and friendships. She has always preferred having boys as friends, shunning other girls and having strong opinions about their passions and how they act and they wear. Mara isn't like the girl her mother wants her to be. She hates dresses and heels, she doesn't like makeup and talking about boys and, when other girls join the football team, she is irritated she's seen as "one of them", as someone who doesn't know football and can't play properly.
Mara struggles with her family, her absent father, her distant and jealous brother, her bigot (and frankly) a bit homophobic mother, who wants to force her to dress and act according to her vision of what girls should do, dress and act, blackmailing and hurting her, refusing to accept her as herself and her passion. At the same time, though, Mara has also preconceived notions about gender and sexuality and, during the book, she will learn to be more open and to accept that being a girl doesn't mean only dress or act feminine and doing "girly sports".
Mara is forced to face her family and friends, while fighting to be who she is, finding new friends and allies (I loved her relationship with Jupiter) and proving to herself she can do anything and during the whole book the characters change and grow up, revealing their true nature in their intricacies and complexities, disappointing and surprising her.
I also loved how Mara realizes the people who truly love and support her and the female friendships, their bond and love is truly amazing. I've also loved the slow burn and the cute love story, while Mara discovers and understands more about herself and her sexuality.
In this coming- of- age the author addresses many important themes, like sexism, sexual harassment, homophobia and violence. Mara is angry, she's upset, she feels trapped in her small town, by her mother, her desires and her fears to be who she really is, to be open about her sexuality and passions, about what she wants to do and dress and cut her hair. Claustrophobic and forced to act, dress and be someone she's not, Mara fights to be who she is and, while the football was a way to get back to the basketball team, it opens a new world for her. A world where she will learn who her real friends are, what unity and support means, who to be who she is and be finally free.
I love the way the author talks about the misconceptions surrounding being a girl and what a girl should do, dress, act and play to be accepted. Mara, and after her example, Valentina, Carly, River and Tayley, fight against these precoinceived notions, proving they can enjoy dresses and makeup and still play sports considered "for men" (like football) and be good at them, they can be flirt and be cheerleaders and refusing to accept sexism and violence. There's nothing girls can't do and this book is truly perfect.
I totally recommend this book to those who are looking for strong and stubborn female characters, brilliant plot and wonderful characterization, in a captivating, thrilling and amazing book about fighting for oneself and one's passions.