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The Kissing Club

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BfK No. 170 - May 2008

Cover Story
This issue’s cover illustration is from Frank Cottrell Boyce’s Cosmic. Frank Cottrell Boyce is interviewed by George Hunt. Thanks to Macmillan Children’s Books for their help with this May cover.

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The Kissing Club

Julia Clarke
(OUP Oxford)
288pp, 978-0192754165, RRP £5.99, Paperback
14+ Secondary/Adult
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When on a visit to her friend Augusta in the USA, Megan, aged 14, joined ‘the Kissing Club’; she ‘became a professional virgin and also gave up telling lies’, but she found the first part easier than the second. So, in her A-level year, how did she become pregnant without even a boyfriend around? Her parents go into denial about the whole thing, leaving her with little support apart from the rather geeky Corey, and having to do a lot of growing-up before the arrival of the baby.

An awful lot of ‘issues’ surface in Clarke’s novel. Megan’s parents are highly ambitious for themselves and their daughter; in particular her mother is obsessive about weight-control, her own and her daughter’s. Megan’s favourite teacher has his own problems, and for a while a teacher-from-hell thinks he might be the father of Megan’s baby. Meanwhile, her Granny Blake who has a serious problem with drink and rackety living has a fall, necessitating a stay with Megan’s family. A few other dramas surface along the way too, but the core of the book revolves around mother/daughter relationships: Megan’s with her mother, and her mother’s with her own mother. Resolution is achieved rather simply; would that all alcoholics could be dried out as relatively quickly as Granny Blake, and tense, over-achieving mothers be unwound by a few drinks and a spot of salsa dancing. Nevertheless, this is a decent attempt to write about an unexpected teen pregnancy, and a few other matters too, in a way that tries to explore different sides of a question in a non-judgemental way.

Reviewer: 
Valerie Coghlan
3
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