BOOK REVIEW of THE PARKOUR CLUB
Kirkus Reviews
March 2021
Two teens fall for one another amid an extreme sport and an extremist plot in Withers and Hayat’s YA novel.
Sixteen-year-old Bronte Miller has returned to her hometown of Richland, Washington, after a year in Egypt. She misses her life in Alexandria, including her romance with Sarfraz, a boy from the Parkour Academy whom she kept secret from her parents.
Richland is boring in comparison, at least until Yemeni refugee Karam Saif comes to town. Karam is an outsider in every way, but he and Bronte share two things in common: Bronte’s father is a journalist currently covering the war in Yemen, and they have a mutual love of the sport of parkour.
Parkour—an activity that involves running, jumping, and climbing over obstacles—is popular at Bronte’s high school. There’s even a parkour club, run by the new computer teacher from France, Julian Legendre.
Bronte soon develops feelings for Karam. It isn’t long, though, before suspicions between the Muslim and non-Muslim communities in Richland boil into an extremist recruitment controversy involving both teens—along with Bronte’s father and the parkour club itself!
Withers and Hayat write in apt, punchy prose: “One by one, starting on the floor, we throw ourselves against the poles, sometimes bashing our poor bodies against them, mostly sliding right off like the metal is greased. But gradually, a few of us start getting it—sticking one out of five times, one out of four times.”
The premise of the novel is somewhat hard to believe: Nearly every character, no matter where they are from, happens to love parkour? Really? Once the reader gets past that, the book reveals itself to be about American fears and misunderstandings of Islam and the Arab world…even if those fears and misunderstandings crop up in ways that are very on-the-nose.
Bronte is perhaps a bit too angst-y, Karam a bit too idealized, and Legendre a bit too unbelievable, but fans of big, unsubtle YA sports novels will likely enjoy this intriguing blend of parkour, cross-cultural understanding, and teen romance. Memorable, if sometimes ham-fisted.
The Parkour Club is available on Amazon.
Congrats on this KIRKUS review. Sounds like the novel worked! If you can pull it off even with his reservations ‘on the nose’ and everyone liking Parcour — you’ve got a great book. So glad you are writing about ways of connecting in spite of cultural challenges.