Pages: 246
Publisher:
Scholastic
Release
Date: 5th
February 2015
Edition:
UK paperback,
review copy
A
week can change everything.
Beautiful
and popular, Kez is a bully who doesn’t care who she hurts.
Overweight
and awkward, Jess is an easy target.
But
then Jess discovers someone who will stand up for her.
The
problem?
He’s
Kez’s boyfriend.
Things
are about to get nasty.
Eve Ainsworth’s debut, Seven Days, is a gripping and emotional
novel about bullying that tells both sides of the story.
Bullying novels are a staple of
YA because bullying is a worrying constant for lots of people growing up, but
very rarely do you get to see the story from the view of the bully and the victim. It was so interesting to
see the same confrontations and their after-effects from both sides, and
especially the reasoning behind the bully’s attacks. Kez and Jess are both very
complicated and very real characters; I knew quite a few Kez’s at school and in
college, and I was a Jess myself. Everything that Kez prayed on in Jess – her
weight, her scruffiness, her meekness – were things that provoked an emotional
reaction in Kez and her discomfort in those things and how they reflected in
her life. It actually shed a new perspective on the girls that treated me in
the way that Kez treated Jess.
Jess’s experience with bullying
hit a nerve but it really struck me in the differences between being bullied in
the mid-00s and now. And the difference? The internet. It’s amazing how easy it
is for people to be bullied without detection – it’s scary. But the bullying
wasn’t restricted to Facebook and it was horrifying to me that it wasn’t
noticed by teachers or Jess’ mum. But Jess’s mum really had very little time
for her children.
Another big theme of Seven Days is the struggle of disadvantaged
families. Part of Kez’s issue with Jess is the way she ends up presenting
herself as a little ragged and un-put-together due to the way she has to care
for her little sister a lot of the time and her mum not having enough money to buy
her new clothes. It was always the same in my school – the people that didn’t
have new, pristine uniforms and didn’t have all of the cool, new things were
the ones ridiculed for it, and it was never their fault. And of course, there
were others like me who were bullied for their weight, or intelligence, or
general appearance. Thinking back on it, there were very few people who escaped
bullying at school, and who knows how many of those were bullied at home as
well, just like Kez.
Seven
Days is an
easy to read novel about a hard to read subject – thought provoking and
important, I really hope this does the rounds in schools.
Thanks to Scholastic for the
review copy!
Sophie
A completely 100% agree - brilliant review :)
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