The Learning Curves of Vanessa Partridge by Clare Strahan
It’s the start of the summer holidays, and the Partridges are off to the beach. But it’s a new kind of family holiday altogether – mum’s gone to Paris to ‘find herself’, abandoning siblings Vanessa and Ash to the reality of their newly appointed stepmother Rochelle, previously their nanny, and their difficult mogul father. Vanessa packs a suitcase, empty but for her pyjamas, deciding that this summer she will reinvent herself into an alluring 15-year-old woman. But this summer project is interrupted when Vanessa meets some environmental activists who are convinced her dad is doing dodgy business deals, putting the entire coastal town at risk. Then there is Bodhi, the attractive older activist who shows an interest in Vanessa as she begins to explore her sexuality.
Things get complicated pretty quickly. With an absent mother, and a distant, potentially evil father, Vanessa does her best to grapple alone with understanding desire, consent, rape culture, sexual assault, and ‘doing the right thing’. This is smart, wickedly funny, and painfully relatable teenage fiction that explores heavy topics with honesty and humour. Vanessa is a wonderful protagonist, and invites the reader to sit with all too familiar teenage discomfort, awkwardness and angst. Vanessa’s life is bog-standard teenage chaos, but she’s got a lot of heart and grit to get herself through. Amazingly, amidst all the drama Vanessa never seems to forget to do her cello practice either.
Expect laughter, and more laughter again. It will be a definite hit with those who love contemporary YA. For readers aged 14+.