
Our score:
4.6 / 5
Half His Age: A Novel
Jennette McCurdyOur Review:
I finished Half His Age in two sittings, which tells you something about how hard it is to look away from Waldo's story. McCurdy has written a protagonist who is messy and contradictory in ways that feel genuinely alive—she's self-aware enough to question her own motivations, yet still driven by desire and longing in ways she can't fully understand or control. The novel doesn't shy away from the uncomfortable aspects of her obsession with her teacher; instead, it sits with that discomfort and asks you to hold multiple truths at once about desire, power, and what it means to want something you shouldn't.
What struck me most was how the book balances its darker psychological elements with sharp social observation. McCurdy weaves in commentary on consumerism, class anxiety, and the particular loneliness of being young and connected to everyone and no one simultaneously. The pacing is genuinely thrilling—there's a momentum to Waldo's choices that keeps you reading even when you're cringing or frustrated with her. The writing has a confessional intimacy that makes you feel like you're inside her head, which is sometimes exhilarating and sometimes unsettling, exactly as intended.
I'll be honest: this book isn't for everyone. If you're looking for a protagonist to root for unambiguously, or if you prefer narratives that neatly resolve moral questions, you might find this challenging. The story doesn't judge Waldo so much as illuminate her, which requires a reader willing to sit with complexity and discomfort. But if you're drawn to character-driven fiction that examines desire and self-destruction with intelligence and dark humor, this is absolutely worth your time. It's the kind of book that stays with you and makes you think differently about the stories we tell about young women and what they want.
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