#CBR11 Review #02: The Foxhole Court by Nora Sakavic (All for the Game #1)
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The Foxhole Court
is the first novel of Nora Sakavic’s All
for the Game, which gives an intriguing beginning for what is to come, but unfortunately
does not really stand so well as a book on it’s own: it’s clearly just a
buildup, and given it’s slim run of under 300 pages, I wonder if perhaps it
would not have work to put the 3 instalments of the series into one novel with
parts/books 1-2-3 all together? But that’s not my decision at the end of the
day, and I feel like I will continue to see where the series goes, if only out
of curiosity from some of the twists thrown in at the end.
This novel primarily deals with a teenager named Neil, though
it is clear from the beginning that this is not his real name: he has been on
the run for years from his father and those who know him, given that his dad is
a well-known murderer currently in jail. Neil and his mother have been hiding
their identities, yet Neil now finds himself on his own and is trying to just
make it way through school remaining unseen, when he is recruited to a high-profile
college Exy team; Exy is a lacrosse-like sport that Neil used to love as a
child, and he recently found a newfound passion in at his latest school, only
to find himself being offered a potential future that he never thought
possible. The problems, however, are that a) if he joins this team his face
will likely be more seen and he questions whether he looks different enough
from when his father last saw him as a child to keep on the run, and b) one of
the stars of this team is an old childhood friend of Neil named Kevin, who he
really doesn’t want to recognize him (also Kevin’s family was involved in some
crime with Neil’s father at some point?).
In any case, what could be just a simple sports story about
a team of misfits thrown together that don’t get along but form a bond gets turned
on its head into a darker tale involving murder, abuse, crime families, and
mental illness. And this is certainly interesting and why I am curious to see
where the story goes with this! But also, it’s a bit ridiculous, and the way
these things are thrown together doesn’t always work so organically. This may
also have to do with how some of the writing and dialogue doesn’t seem to flow
quite so naturally, especially in conversations between the pricklier
characters, of which there are many. Speaking of which, the characters are also
a conflicting aspect of the novel for me, because it seems to me that there is
more to these characters than the one-notes they appear to be right now, but I
have yet to see it, and unfortunately a lot of them are very unlikeable or just
so outlandish that I wonder how I’m supposed to root for them? Perhaps the
dynamics of the team will be explored more in the next book in the series.
So really, this isn’t per say a great book, and maybe as the
series goes on my impression of it won’t change given how I found the writing
itself a little awkward. But I truly am curious about how all the little threads,
dramas, and issues of these characters are going to come together in the end:
the hooks are in me, and now I must see where I can find the next book!
[Be sure to visit the Cannonball Read main site!]
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