Bad Girl- Confessions Of A Teenage Delinquent -

Bad Girl- Confessions Of A Teenage Delinquent -

However, Bad Girl suffers from its own authenticity. The fragmented style becomes exhausting by the midway point. Just when a narrative thread begins to form—a potential redemption arc with a sympathetic art teacher, or a genuine friendship with a fellow delinquent named Dove—the book deliberately burns it down. While this is thematically consistent (chaos resists narrative), it makes for frustrating reading.

But for those willing to sit in the muck of a teenager’s worst impulses, the book offers something rare: a mirror held up to the delinquent not as a caricature, but as a fully realized, broken human being. It is a flawed, messy, and important scream into the void. Bad Girl- Confessions Of A Teenage Delinquent

Rating: ★★★☆☆ (3.5/5)

Furthermore, the supporting characters are sketched too thinly. Riley’s mother is a one-note portrait of addiction, and the male authority figures are uniformly predatory or useless. By the final act, the book’s nihilism feels less like a profound statement and more like a refusal to grow up. The ending, which implies a cycle of recidivism, is brave but hollow. However, Bad Girl suffers from its own authenticity