From the opening lines, The Rebel’s Guide to Pride is a wild adventure. I want to preface this with you by saying I’m not the target audience, and I think this would definitely appeal to teenagers. As a mid-30s adult, I was stressed by these teenage antics despite my ability to understand why Zeke was acting the way he was. Hubbard has a unique ability to capture teenage angst, heartbreak, and a generalized feeling of being mad at your parents with ease that felt relatable to the young 16-year-old inside my heart.I appreciated the way he approached divorce and I especially thought Zeke‘s relationship with his mother felt realistic as a parent, I couldn’t help but think about how even when you do the right thing timing matters.I loved Zeke’s growth from a little rebel to finding his purpose and who he wanted to be. I loved his found family with his friends, the bantery text messages, the complex relationships with his parents, and the way he had to learn to communicate with his friends. I definitely would go back and read Hubbard‘s other book and look forward to what he comes out with next.
- Book Review
- The Rebel’s Guide to Pride
- Matthew Hubbard
- April 16, 2025
The Rebel’s Guide to Pride
Related
READ VIA:
Thank you, Macmillan Audio, for the free advanced listening copy.
ABOUT:
When Joy Moore goes missing, Benny Abbot immediately spirals into panic. Joy is his best friend and podcast co-host, and there appears to be a decent strain in their relationship. Benny’s unease is compounded by the fact that Joy’s husband, Xander, is also missing. As the days pass, Benny becomes a subject himself. It is only through Joy’s POV that the truth begins to come to life.
MY THOUGHTS:
This is one heck of a debut. I love that this thriller also had this huge friendship/romance subplot. Genre-bending lovers, this is for you.
The writing is sharp, the pacing near perfect, and the reveals are shocking. Crum easily propels this narrative forward in a way that left me excited every time I picked this book up.
In particular, I enjoyed the feeling of not knowing whom to trust, and Crum did an excellent job of casting doubt in the reader’s mind about what was happening.
The dual timeline- dual POV helped feed my ever present suspense while also giving me enough information to keep me fully engaged!
Plus, the Los Angeles hills vibe was immaculate, which always makes me enjoy a book more!
AUDIO:
If you are an audiobook fan, you need to listen to this book. The production quality is through the roof. Whelan and Hopkins complement each other so well! I wanted this podcast to be real. The snippets we got were so excellent!
SIMILAR BOOKS:
This reminded me of None of This is True, but that might just be because it’s a podcast. This was (thankfully) a little less dark.
SHOULD YOU READ:
This Might Save Your Life will be a hit for fans of thrillers and contemporary fiction alike.
