I don’t think I’ve ever seriously wanted to be able to give a six-star rating on Goodreads. My five-star reviews are boisterous enough, but I really have never read a book that I could see myself in as much as this one. Add in some much-needed heartfelt messages and, well, I am knocked out by how much Lark and Kasim Start a Revolution blew me away and ripped me to pieces.
Lark is 17, a young aspiring writer who has been working on their first book “Birdie Takes Flight”. So young and…so unpublished. They’re just starting their writing class at the commons that they’ve taken countless times before. However, this term things are different, they won’t have their best friend beside them, Kasim. Constant arguing made them drift apart and now, they don’t know where they stand. Kasim stays over for convenience and accidentally posts a thread on Lark’s Twitter account about desperate, unrequited love. It blows up. When Lark takes the credit, things spiral out of control. It makes them consider the value of honesty and how love and self-love can be truly achieved in a world built to make you fail.
The first thing that stood out to me was the way the viewpoint was articulated. The whole story is from Lark’s very neurodivergent perspective. Instead of making everything clear and profound, the narrative focused mainly on their perception and it led us down wormholes of thought, up internal information mountains, and persistently upheld the mindset of a neurodivergent. I knew that this would most likely be the thing neurotypical brains would dislike the most–along with an unintroduced imaginary character named Birdie that was confusing at first. But in all honesty, that was one of my favorite things about this novel. I have never read a book that felt like my brain. I am glad that there is now a book being released into this world that is for us.
Lark talks about their neurodivergence near the beginning saying that they don’t want to be tested. They could be autistic, have ADHD, or both. After my deep neurodivergent analysis of their character while reading I have deemed them both. Sue me.
Lark is also Black and nonbinary. It is revolutionary to have a character that embraces those parts of themself wholeheartedly. It wasn’t a big part of the book in the sense that there was no drama or an identity crisis where those things were debated and dissected. However, it was a bridge to give them a community of friends–all Black and Brown. There is so much fuss in YA about figuring yourself out and far less about actually living settled in your skin.
Other than the representation–that is some of the best I’ve ever read–Lark and Kasim Start a Revolution delves deep into our culture of calling out and responsibility. In Care Work, Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha talks about this in the context of being a QTBIPOC and disabled activist. In general, they say that as a society we expect that activist leaders must take every grain of criticism and respond accordingly. That there are no boundaries or means to protect yourself from spiteful “well-intentioned” criticism, and that marginalized leaders who are already faced with so many challenges daily are then demonized instead of being someone who just made a mistake.
–Spoilers–
In this book, Lark has a deeply held belief that all humans are deserving of love, that everyone is naturally loving and should be treated with love and kindness. They say that the only way we do not return to loving others as a default is because we convince ourselves they are not human. And that we have created a culture of hate because of this. As an example, they present the dehumanization of Black people because of white supremacy. They go on to say that we need to have defining morals against degrading others, but it goes both ways and we shouldn’t call cops pigs.
–Spoilers Finished–
I am die-hard antisocial, so my love is reserved for a deserving few that is mostly cats and books, but I understand where Lark is coming from. We need to look for the humanity in others but also separate “loving” others from being nice, complicit, people-pleasing, and palatable. This could and should be used in a social justice setting.
People misunderstand what Lark is saying constantly and they are bullied brutally online and in person. Frankly, it was triggering because it so accurately shows how neurodivergent people are bullied. They just don’t want to listen to Lark. The book handles this well.
I think I’ve kvelled and pontificated enough for you to get the point: read this book and have an open mind. In so many ways Callender is doing things that have never been done before, from a toe-curling romance to a difficult and deeply needed conversation. I know that if you just listen, this book might just change your perspective. I know it changed the amount of hope I have in humanity! Then prepare for a killer book hangover–it will be awful.
—ARC Provided by High Five Books—