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The New York Four by Brian Wood and Ryan Kelly

If you’re looking for subtle or profound statements on growing up, finding your place in the crowd — heck, just finding yourself — and the psychological effect New York City has on a naive person, “The New York Four” may not suit you. If you’d like a teen soap opera version that touches on all those points — with a lot of loose threads dangling for an inevitable sequel — then step right up, Brian Wood and Ryan Kelly’s likable page-turner of college girl angst.

Riley is a socially awkward, shy Brooklyn girl who breaks out of her sheltered home life to attend NYU. The city unfolds for her — indeed, the novel at times reads like a teenage hipster’s guide to NYC — and she settles into her girl clique. The novel is structured through a series of psychological interviews on film, with the girls talking about their school lives — it’s part of a job they all land that requires evaluations.

The bulk of the novel revolves around Riley’s relationship with her over-protective parents and the rediscovery of her long lost older sister, as well as a mysterious romance subplot that dances alongside her quest for an apartment with her new college girl friends — the more life experience you have, the more obvious the revelations of the romance plot will be to you. You want to warn Riley, but these kids have to make their own mistakes, you know?

The others in the New York Four get less space for their characters to unfold — a page here, a page there. Given this treatment of the secondary characters I can only assume that this is the first book in a series, during which further aspects of these girls will be revealed — and these aspects will no doubt cause heartache, angst, and drama.

Can’t wait!

In a lot of ways, this actually reminds me of Frederick Kohner’s Gidget novels and therein lies its charm. It’s basically an innocent, fantasy-laden vision of what teenage life is, filled with conflicts over life decisions and boys, all put in a modern context. There might be romantic mishaps in a Gidget story, but here those mishaps involve secretive texting on cell phones. Riley might not get a job at the United Nations, but pretty much everything else in “The New York Four” reminds me of the tone of “Gidget Goes to New York” which, I suppose, puts it in direct line with the genre, both then and now, of young girls making it in the big city.

It’s a graphic novel beach book of the best kind. Follow-ups just need a handsome stranger character and they will be good to go.

Posted 6 months ago at 11:44 pm by John.

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