Award-winning thriller writer Sheena Kamal delivers a kick-ass debut
YA novel about a teenage kick-boxer coming to terms with her father
passing away.
Love and violence. In some families they're bound up together,
dysfunctional and poisonous, passed from generation to generation like
eye color or a quirk of smile. Trisha's trying to break the chain,
channeling her violent impulses into Muay Thai kickboxing, an unlikely
sport for a slightly built girl of Trinidadian descent. Her father comes
and goes as he pleases, his presence adding a layer of tension to the
Toronto east-end townhouse that Trisha and her mom call home, every
punch he lands on her mother carving itself indelibly into Trisha's
mind. Until the night he wanders out drunk in front of the car Trisha is
driving, practicing on her learner's permit, her mother in the passenger
seat. Her father is killed, and her mother seems strangely at peace.
Lighter, somehow. Trisha doesn't know exactly what happened that night,
but she's afraid it's going to happen again. Her mom has a new man in
her life and the patterns, they are repeating.