Reviewed by Leah on
Little Peach is one of the shortest books I’ve read in ages – taking me just over an hour, but it’s heavy duty stuff. I’ve never read a book about teen prostitution before, and it’s sort of left me wide-eyed and terribly frightened for anyone suffering as Michelle did. And Kat. And Baby. It’s scary. It made me sick to my stomach when Baby said she was only 12 years old. Yuck. Just, yuck. I wanted to stop reading, almost as much as I didn’t want to stop reading.
What I liked is that Peggy Kern doesn’t sugarcoat stuff. The novel is upfront and honest, and dives right into the heart of the matter. Wham, bam, thank you, ma’am. I rather appreciated the pace of the novel and the fact there’s no blathering and that Michelle is hardly old enough to know what Devon is doing to her, and so her narration is sickly sweet, and to the point. There’s no time for her to reconsider, because there’s nowhere else she can go – she only ended up in New York because her mom didn’t want her in Philly. No wonder she saw Devon as a safe haven!
It’s one of those novels that just leaves you a bit speechless, a bit flabbergasted. It’s hard to say I enjoyed it, but I did. I liked how we saw Michelle in the present, all beaten and broken, but determined to help herself if the lady with the card can help her, and then we flash back to how Michelle got into that predicament in the first place. It’s completely harrowing, and the authors note at the back doesn’t help at all, because sadly there are true stories about the Michelle’s, Kat’s and Baby’s of this world. It makes me want to weep forever, and ever and I applaud Peggy for writing such a brutal, honest novel. Little Peach is astounding, a must read for everyone, despite it’s horrific nature.
Reading updates
- Started reading
- 30 July, 2014: Finished reading
- 30 July, 2014: Reviewed