A coming-of-age story that follows the meteoric rise of singer Amber Young as she navigates fame in the late-1990s and early-2000s era of pop music superstardom
It is 1997, and Amber Young has received a life-changing call. It is a chance thousands of girls would die for: the opportunity to join girl group Cloud9 in Los Angeles and escape her small town. She quickly finds herself in the orbits of fellow rising stars Gwen Morris, a driven singer-dancer, and Wes Kingston, a member of the biggest boy band in the world, ETA.
As Amber embarks on her solo career and her fame intensifies, her rich interior life is frequently reduced. Surrounded by people who claim to love her but only wish to exploit her, and driven by a desire for recognition and success, for love and sex, for agency and connection, Amber comes of age at a time when the kaleidoscope of public opinion can distort everything and one mistake can shatter a career.
Isabel Banta’s debut novel redefines the narratives of some of the most famous pop icons of the 1990s and 2000s. It reimagines the superstars we idolized and hated, oversexualized and underestimated, and gives them the fresh, multifaceted story they deserve.
Isabel Banta is a writer, book publicist, and indie bookseller based in Brooklyn. She graduated from the University of Virginia. Honey is her debut novel.
this book is basically if Britney Spears Memoir and Daisy Jones & The Six had a baby. the fact that this is her debut novel is insane, usually with debut novels there’s some imperfections but this was literally perfect
This book had all the makings of being right up my alley (I started it the day after I received it over the other 30 books I have on my TBR pile), but it just didn't work for me. It was decent, but at the end of the day, I didn't particularly care about these characters or what was going on in their lives... their self-reflection at the age of 19 rang false and the relationship between Gwen and Amber and Amber and Wes just didn't feel legitimate or real. With this type of book, I want to feel what these characters are feeling and going through, but it never pulled any kind of emotion out of me.
ugh this one had so much potential but was lacking a lot in execution for me.
the synopsis was so intriguing (a young girl turns into a mega pop star) and those plots always get me but with books of similar storylines (think Daisy, Evelyn, Hayley Aldridge, etc) this was lacking!
i saw all meh reviews so didn’t expect much, but the only reason i did read it is bc my queen Brittany Pressley narrates the audio format. if you do read this one, try that version!
i felt like everything was halfway done… her relationship with Wes… the ending (why couldn’t we get a chapter with the ending instead of an article telling us what happened??)… even her being a popstar was such halfway flushed out? like show me what it was like being a popstar!! being famous!! being rich!! touring!! being popular!! being everything…
TLDR; had potential but lacking all around. will ultimately be forgettable!
The writing was beautiful & this had some PHENOMENAL quotes/lines, but the plot itself lost my interest quite a few times. Also (hot take!) I do NOT like song lyrics in books. Like PAGES of lyrics. I will skim them every time. It feels like someone is singing to me & I cringe internally.
It’s the late 90s, and high school student Amber lives in a cramped New Jersey apartment with her alcoholic mom and angsty brother. Her life is forever changed when she gets selected to join an up and coming girl group. Fast forward a few years and she’s a full-fledged pop star, Rolling Stone cover and all. But along with fame comes constant public scrutiny of her body, clothing and sex life. She loves to sing…but is being in the spotlight really worth it?
This story was very fun and will definitely appeal to both nostalgic millennials and Y2K-loving Gen Zs. Think of it as a novelization of Britney Spears’s song Lucky. And yet its take on these subjects is refreshingly modern. It avoids relying on lazy narratives of an innocent girl victimized by the industry or a feud between pop princesses. For instance, Amber balks at the objectifying way in which the industry sexualizes her, but she is also written as someone who is a sexual being and enjoys being sexy on her own terms. And she and the pop star who the media likes to cast as her chief rival are actually close and supportive friends. I love that this book also depicted some of its side characters as pop stars in healthy queer relationships hidden from the media.
Overall, this book was a lot of fun, while also raising important concerns about the way society treated famous women in the early 2000s. I’d recommend it for anyone who devoured Britney’s biography and thought, “gimme more.”
Isabel Banta’s, Honey, is a beautifully written debut novel that follows Amber Young, a rising pop-star in the 90’s, and the fluctuations of being a woman in the spotlight, especially during this period of time. I knew within the first few pages of this novel that Honey would be a book that enthrals me, and it would have me either devouring the pages or taking my time to appreciate the beauty and the magic behind every sentence. It surprisingly turned out to be the second option. I wanted to savour every last moment of the novel.
Honey covers an extensive range of topics such as the objectification and the unfair treatment of women by the media, how society often sows dissension between women, the contradictory standards for both men and women, misogyny, the power of dynamics, and so much more.
One of the main things I loved about Honey was the vividness of Banta’s characterisation. It had me wanting to google the characters’ names as I was utterly convinced they were real people. Banta made the vision of the world of ‘90s pop stars come to life that made the unfortunate events Amber found herself in seem so relatable yet I simultaneously felt as though I was learning something new. It made me realise just how bad we as a society treat women who are in the spotlight. The novel read very similar to a memoir, but with the atmosphere and the evocative beats of Daisy Jones and the Six and The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo.
Through Amber, the reader gains an insight into the often dark and exploitative world of Hollywood and the silent suffering of many women who dare to venture in. Honey showcases the real and the raw, and the often difficult methods women have to implore to reach the top, as their male counterparts benefit from their exploitation. I felt a sense of exasperation on Amber’s behalf for the way in which the people around her persistently tried to control her, convert her image, and suppress her voice. How some of the things Amber was continuously admired for were used to raze her back to the ground. How there are so many possible ways to be a woman, yet none of them ever seemed to be enough. I found Amber’s story bears a resemblance to themes that were discussed in Britney Spears’ memoir ‘The Woman In Me’. I think we owe so many women who are in the spotlight an apology. While Amber’s story of being a pop-star during the 1990’s is a unique premise, I think many of the issues that were discussed inside of the novel are universal and I’m certain many people will resonate with at least one part of the story.
I can’t recover from discovering that Honey is Banta’s debut novel. She is a once-in-a-lifetime talent and the way she writes makes it feel as though she has been writing and publishing books for years. Please buy this book when it’s released so I have even more of an excuse to talk about it!
A huge thank you to NetGalley, Bonnier Books, and the incredible Isabel Banta for providing me with a chance to read this ARC in exchange for an honest review. I’m so excited to read more of Banta’s work in the future.
“What did you want to be?" "What I am now. I just imagined it differently." "Different how?" "I imagined I would be happy.” 3.5⭐️
thank you librofm for the alc ♡
a britney/xtina/JT inspired story about a pop girl’s rise to fame with poignant prose had several highlights and really enjoyed the writing style i definitely am interested in reading more from Isabel Banta in the future
but i didn’t connect much to the setting and to our main pop protagonist, Amber Young. it felt like Amber was a secondary character in her own story. i never fully bought that she wanted to become a pop star, more that she just fell into it. i think Gwen was a far more interesting character by far
This book is proof of why believing the hype train on social media is not always a great idea for yours truly. Buuuuuuut, the FOMO always wins out so of course I got my name on the library list when I saw this title popping up all over the place around release date.
Basically this is exactly what the gif above states. Some Wattpad caliber erotic friend fiction about Xtina, Britney and JT. And it was turrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrible. I still can’t wrap my brain around who the target audience is, because although it touts itself as being a "coming of age" story - basically it was a porno with zero plot and a plethora of undercarriage-drying sex scenes that appeared to be written by a teenager. Oof.
I read this book as part of the readalong the publisher hosted. Celadonbooks set me up with 3 other readers. We did a fun collab video on Instagram and I loved it.
I started reading this book and read up to page 143. I noticed Libro.fm has it on audiobook so I finished the story via audiobook.
I enjoyed reading/listening to this book. This book was organized by year starting in the 90s and ending past year 2000. This story followed Amber throughout her music career, from the uncertainty of the beginning to the unexpected ending. Amber was an insecure person when she was young. Her start to music was due to her love of singing. When she went out to auditions, the competition was fierce because others had more lessons than her and they were well prepared than her. Their moms were more supportive and hands on than hers. Her body developed faster than other girls and she was portrayed a different way. At first I felt annoyed that she relied so much on the motivation from others to operate but now, I understand why she lacked the confidence. I am unsure why she didn't try to make more friends instead of fighting so hard to keep one.
This book touches on some big subjects of some years in history, like Bill Clinton, the worry of the apocalypse, and the Twin Towers. It's good to read this book since I lived through this time. There's that popular song, "Let's Talk About S*x Baby" and I think that song goes well with this book. Amber's love life struggled just like her career and her life.
There are actual song lyrics in this book! The audiobook plays music but the narrator didn't sing it.
It's a good read and audiobook. To see someone struggle through the storm before seeing the light. Excellent writing and debut.
Thank you Celadonbooks and Librofm for the opportunity to read, listen, and review.
*Thank you to the publisher for sending me an early copy to review!*
I was excited for this one because the concept sounded exciting and it had been compared to Taylor Jenkins Reid, but it ended up being very middling. Still worth the read if you’re desperately curious, but nothing overly special to me.
The writing was fine, if a little basic. The characters we have in here coupled with the overarching storyline gave it the potential to be such a powerful and memorable read, but neither aspect really hit the mark. To give it credit it was extremely fast paced and it did have enough baseline entertainment for me to stay interested and want to finish it, but when I think about what this book could have been and how it had all of the right ingredients coupled with the wrong recipe - I feel so disappointed.
This book introduces quite a lot of complex themes, and the discussions it almost but never quite had really could have turned this book around honestly. It didn’t hit as hard as it should have done considering it’s set in the brutality of the early 2000’s and we all know how that culture was cruel to young women. It attempted to tackle it, but barely made a dent. We start discussing things like fame and misogyny and mental health only to abandon them a few sentences later, it just left the whole book feeling like it had a gaping hollowness to it. We skip around a lot and the depth that these conversations need is just not there, it’s so underdeveloped as a narrative and it’s a real shame because I wanted to sink my teeth into those moments. For instance, and then it’s never spoken about again. I feel like these elements need to be done justice or don’t bother doing them at all, it felt almost lazy. Like we were rushing to finish the book off and wrap it up quickly, when a longer piece with padding would’ve been soooo much better. Also on a vaguely similar note.. here mom is only is this for like two chapters and is conveniently forgotten about which was odd.
Again, I think the characters here were really good and again, had unmet potential. The differing personalities made for some really interesting dynamics and relationship set ups that were juicy. The scandalous element of the book felt half baked though. I honestly didn’t really care about Amber’s romantic endeavours until the end (which I loved) and by then it again, I feel like a broken record no pun intended, it just felt too much too soon. I need time to build emotional connections with the characters, I need to believe their chemistry and their relationship. That didn’t always come across to me here. I enjoyed Amber’s story though and I think her happily ever after and moment of peace was nice.
The inclusion of the multimedia formatting in the book is such a cute and fun idea, but it felt like a half effort. They were seemingly random and didn’t contribute anything to the storyline or character development in a way that was meaningful. I am also of the opinion that song lyrics shouldn’t be written in books, I have no idea what to do with them so I sort of just skim read. The lyrics themselves felt a little excessive too. We have a lot of songs taking up several pages in here, they just felt like filler and a bit of a waste of space. The lyrics themselves weren’t great either, and they didn’t do anything to give Amber depth and personality. I think the book would have been better off without them. They fell flat at best, cringe and embarrassing at worst.
I think this book was fine, and I think Banta is definitely going to be an author I keep reading. They will write a book I will fall wholly in love with, but it wasn’t this one sadly.
DNF at 150p….I’m an ‘84 baby. Born and raised in Orlando Florida. This SHOULD have been my book! My teenage years were the years in this book and the author missed by a large margin. This was nothing but a narcissistic teenage drama. This book never captivated the resurgence of the teenage pop scene NOR the absolute magnitude of teenage pop icons of that time. I kept trying to see Britney Spears, Christina Aguilera, Mandy Moore or Jessica Simpson…hell even Destiny’s Child or Dream…in these pages and I never did. Each of those women represented a different facet of the pop craze and the author clearly wasn’t around for it. I don’t know what she was attempting. Even talking about TRL was flat and TRL defined what became huge at that time.
The main protagonist was the most annoying and narcissistic character I’ve had the displeasure of encountering. Weird, considering this is also the most one dimensional character work I’ve ever read as well. The writing is disjointed. The plot drags. Nothing feels fleshed out. And I just don’t care….which is saying a lot because as a teenager in 1999-2003 in central Florida, I cared A LOT.
And I’m sorry but the lyrics in this book were embarrassing. The sections broken up into a layout that represents a song format were equally awful and so corny.
I wanted to love this. I’ve seen Britney, Christina, Mandy, NSync, BSB and LFO all that their peak. This is a book that should have sent me over the edge in nostalgia. I wasn’t expecting the next great American novel, but I wanted something. Instead I got nothing….
Back in the late 1990s and early 2000s there was a pop culture explosion, particularly in the music industry. While Honey is a fictional story, it is loosely based on the experiences of that TRL generation of teen pop stars and boy bands. Fame can come at a huge cost as the main character, Amber, a young female singer hoping to make it big, will find out.
The author did a good job capturing this time period and how difficult it is for artists to deal with executives, the media, family and friends, and a public who can turn on you in an instant. A well intended story but it does become monotonous after awhile. The ending needed more development as it was rushed to wrap everything up.
Fans of TRL are the ones who will get the most out of this book.
Thank you Celadon for sending me an advance reader’s copy! All thoughts expressed are my honest opinion.
Honey is a coming-of-age story set in the 1990s and chronicles the journey of a young woman, Amber, who had always wanted to be a star. In her late teens, Amber is thrust into the limelight when she joins the pop girl group Cloud9. However, she soon learns that being a good-looking, young, famous female in the 1990s comes at a price.
The plot very much reads like an autobiography. It is written in the first person, from Amber’s point of view, and is set within different timelines, starting in 2002 and then jumping back to 1990 when Amber was a child at school.
The book took me back in time and brought up many memories of being a teenager in the 1990s and the girl groups that were around then. I can remember some of the stories in the newspapers and the way that the singers were objectified. Looking back it wasn’t something I thought too much about at the time though, sad really!
The story is touching and heart-warming, and Amber’s voice and her attitude comes across strongly. I found her so likeable. She was certainly a determined young woman.
Overall, Honey is a fabulous nostalgic read. It has been superbly written and makes the reader invest their time in the story of a young woman who wanted so much for herself and be disgusted at the treatment of her by various industry people.
This was an interesting book for me. I have to say the boy band/pop star princess thing always passed me by so I wasn’t sure how I would feel about this book. I started this one on audiobook and I almost wish I had stuck with that because I love that narrator and I think she helped me see Amber as a whole person and not just see her poor choices. But I’m on vacation and doing the least audiobooking and I’m not patient so I finished with a physical copy. I did sometimes find the pace a little slow. I struggled to understand some of the characters’ motivations at times. I loved the inclusion of other media especially the songs and the commentary about them. It really helped to bring this story to life. Amber always wanted to sing, but after a brief failure as a child she lost hope. As a teenager floundering in school she reaches for her dream and is shocked to hear she is on her way to California to be a part of a girls’ group. This story is Amber’s coming of age combined with coming into herself as an artist/performer. Overall I gave it 3.5 stars rounded up because I read it in one sitting.
HONEY is my favorite book of the year so far, hands down. The writing is precise and energetic and just plain GOOD! It fits in the popular fake historical celebrity memoir category, but I like it even more than those for its nuance, particularly around sexuality and the vulnerability of coming of age as a young woman in the public eye. It’s incredible that this was written before the Britney Spears memoir came out because it has so much compassion and insight into what pop stars at this time and at this age have gone through.
I really couldn’t put it down - the first 100 pages are mostly fleshing out fictional singer Amber Young’s backstory and relationships with other stars Gwen Miller and Wes Kingston and I love that, so when the sex and romance and fame comes in hot and heavy, you just feel so much for these characters. This is a sexy book! This is a complex book! I’m recommending it to everyone this summer.
Amber felt like a character who was just along for the ride in her own story. It was an interesting read but it didn’t make me feel much. The relationships were a bit shallow overall, I would have liked to be able to connect and attach more with literally any of the characters. Overall it was a good read would recommend to anyone who likes a quick fiction with some heart. Thanks to NetGalley for the chance to review.
A wonderfully told story about growing up, finding out who you are and exploring the possibilities that exist for you, even when others are imposing their ideas onto you.
The story is of a young singer named Amber Young, who gets scouted at a young age to join a girl band Cloud9, in the era of girl and boy bands, the book then follows Amber's career, with all the highs and lows of being in the public eye and feeling owned by those around her. Being questioned if her ambition is enough, or is it just a desire to be loved and find love.
The story is cleverly set out into the sections of a song, I really liked this style and I really enjoyed the honesty and rawness of what it is like to be a young girl growing into adulthood in the limelight and how others thoughts and opinions shape who you think you are and impact you.
This is a brilliantly written debut novel, I loved the writing style, Isabel Banta has a great way with words, that help you to become immersed in the life of these pop icons of the late 90's early 00's.
Thank you NetGalley and the publishers for this ARC.
I was skeptical because of the low ratings but I'm glad I kept with it. This is a coming of age story through and through. There are highs and lows to Amber's fame, her relationships, her friendships. They are young and toxic and in love and reckless and Banta did such a good job and crafting their stories and everything around it.
Anyone who grew up in the early 2000s is no stranger to the way women are/were treated in this tumultous time for fame. I particularly loved the fluctations of "relevance" when regarding Amber's character; how she was hated and compared to two other "successful" artists, but she stood the test of time and became the icon herself. And you know what? SHE DID THAT!!!! She was confident, and you know who hates that? The media. Men. Everybody. She was constantly rising despite the misogynistic odds stacked against her. Despite the exploitation, the scandals, the tabloids painting her in false colors. This book was sooo good at showcasing the toxicity in Hollywood.
I think what was most intriguing was Banta's ability to make these not-real characters feel so real. The drama was so vivid as well as characterization of all of the side characters. It genuinely felt like a biography of real people, it was fantastic. There are so many close relationships and trust being broken and things happening that I was absoutely hooked.
OH MY GOD??? This was genuinely so good. How is it possible for a story about an up-and-coming pop star in the late nineties to feel relatable to little old me? Anyway, everyone must read this.
"Honey" by Isabel Banta will make any 90s/early aughts kid reminisce and bask in the nostalgia of a bygone era of TRL, Y2K, 9/11, pop culture frenzies... or it will make you frustrated that it doesn't quite go far enough. It will remind you of the continual media circus Britney Spears, Jessica Simpson, the Backstreet Boys, Usher, and *NSYNC went through as many things that happen in this book are dramatized versions of real-life events that happened during my youth. It is all about first loves, coming-of-age, popularity, the limelight, insecurities, fiction versus reality, friendship, attraction, bodily autonomy, and music. It feels all too real to the experiences myself and many young girls went through during the late nineties and early 2000s when a size four was considered "plus size" and when men gleefully made countdown websites dedicated to young stars who would be turning eighteen. This book shines a spotlight on these dark times in a compelling way. Amber has always wanted to be a star, to get the attention she so desperately craves but does not get from her mother. The beginning of the story is quite enticing and gripped me thoroughly, but it all peters out towards the middle-end of the book. I particularly loved the conversation about having kids, the reasons women feel like they have to have them even if they know in their soul they don't want them. There is also an interesting bit about how mothers hate Amber because she is seen as a role model, which she never asked for, and how the media manipulates everything to sell more magazines/newspapers/get more clicks online. Amber struggles to remain herself, to keep her bodily autonomy, to reclaim who she is and how she looks, when everything else is against her. Honestly, Banta could have set this in 2024 and the result would be the same because very little has changed since the 90s. I also liked the radio/magazine interviews, TV clips, and music performances sprinkles throughout the book. It helps break up the monotony of Amber continually making and performing music, the drama between her and Wes, and her friendship with Gwen. There is a lot to like about this book, though it can feel a little repetitive at times. Definitely worth checking out for those of us who remember this timeframe. Finally, I loved Brittany Pressley's narration. She is one of my favorite audiobook narrators, and she perfectly encapsulates the 2000s-era pop stars depicted in this book.
Thank you to NetGalley, Isabel Banta, Celadon Books, and Macmillan Audio for the complimentary ARC/ALC of this book. All opinions are my own. I was not compensated for this review.
The synopsis of Honey is very intriguing, about a young girl from New Jersey called Amber who dreams to be a famous singer and makes it happen in the late 90s and early 2000. It describes her now public life that is full of the glitter and the gold, and things that are not so glittery or golden.
The book started off okay - it was engaging, and not to mention feeding my curiosity of the US music industry in the 90s. As I read further, I couldn't understand what Amber's goals were. Granted she was still a teenager/young adult when she had her break learning to understand how the industry and the world worked. Yet, as she grew and gained more professional experience, what she wanted and what she actually did were very conflicting (and oftentimes defying belief). I struggled to keep reading.
Two things that I liked from the book was Amber's friendships with Gwen and Axel. That said, these friendships subsequently turned Amber into a secondary character in her own story.
Overall, it was an okay reading experience, 2.5 rounded up to 3 stars. Many thanks for the ebook copy I received in a Goodreads giveaway. Publication date: June 4, 2024.
The further I get from having finished this book the less I like it...
I think it's in part because I've read so many of this kind of story because I like them so much. Here though I just didn't see the point? There wasn't really any kind of original take? There are plenty of articles already reexamining what stardom was like for the pop girls of the early aughts and on the fiction front I'd argue that both of Elissa R. Sloan's books tackle different aspects of that from both a singer perspective and as an actress pushed into the breadwinner roll; built up and then taken down by the same systems. Honey doesn't really do that?
Honey is a book about a talented singer and her middling career that goes nowhere really? Always just bubbling under. She has a sort of complicated romantic entanglement with a boy from her past that who does manage to have an explosive career, but even that storyline takes up a lot of valuable page real estate and also goes nowhere.
Ultimately this book feels like it was picked up because reexamining the late nineties and early aughts is what we like to do these days, but the exploration of that here feels incredibly shallow with characters that ultimately won't stick with the readers for long after they finish.
very mixed opinions about this one. i thought the premise was fantastic, and there were certainly themes explored throughout that i found fascinating, like the sexualisation and exploitation of young girls in the entertainment industry and how that pressure affects all aspects of the main character's life. i also really liked the writing style. however, there was a haziness about this book that i disliked - it's fast-paced, sure, but it glosses over big issues that pop up every so often, and i wished there had been more development of the mc's main relationships, whether romantic or platonic. despite this, though, i'm always going to enjoy books about fictional famous artists and creatives. 3.5 stars.
Thank you to the publisher for the gifted (free) ARC
There are so many aspect of this book I enjoyed. Mentions of bearded dragons, Kissimmee FL, first ever awards shows that I grew up watching. (Cuz the book is set late 90s into early 2000s)
When I first sat down to read this I really wasn’t in the mood, but the next thing I knew I’d read 150 pages. Honey follows Amber Young on her rise to stardom, and shows the struggles she endures to get there. It’s raw, brutal at times, and ultimately a thought provoking story.
I really enjoyed this read and would definitely recommend it.
I’m sorry but like…nothing happens, like, at all. We should have seen this coming with all of the recent revelations and reconciliations of our treatment of 90s and early 2000s pop stars, but this had no teeth, sorry.
I enjoyed this book immensely and sped through it in a few days. While I felt there could have been more depth and detail about the performance and business aspects of the job I still loved this glimpse at the world of 90s pop icons. Underneath all of the glamour and celebrity I felt that this was a very human story with a character that I not only related to but empathized with.
Throughout much of this book I found myself reminiscing about my own late teens years and early to mid twenties while reading through Amber Young's journey. Her decisions, choices, and ways of thinking were really nuanced and accurate to the ages she was portrayed as being. Now that I'm 34 I can see when a decision is wrong but I know what it is to feel the heightened emotions and feelings she felt at such a young age and know I'd not have made any different choices in her position.
The development and growth of her friendship with Gwen, who was very real and multidimensional, was a big highlight of this story. Seeing such an enduring female friendship was really refreshing. Her relationship with Axel Holm was also very interesting. Getting to see her as an artist grow, improve and share ideas with another artist was something that I found fascinating as an artist myself. It's so important to have someone that you can be creative with in your life to push your ideas and work.
The inclusion of magazine interviews, lyrics and wikis really helped flesh out the world and story. they really made me feel more immersed.
While I would have liked a bit more detail on some aspects of her life and career I found this book to be a quick read that I couldn't get enough of.
(Thanks to @CeladonBooks #gifted.) 📀𝗛𝗢𝗡𝗘𝗬📀by debut author Isabel Banta came to me through Celadon’s Read Together Initiative. Together with @thebookishcamper, @themomwithabook and @drealooks_atbooks we traveled through this book a chunk at a time. I don’t do a lot of read-alongs, so it was fun to participate in this one. 𝘏𝘰𝘯𝘦𝘺 is an ode to female singers of the 90’s, with its main character, Amber Young, very much reminding me of Britney Spears. Throughout the story Amber fights hard for the singing career she’s always wanted. Sadly, doing so means giving up much of her personal life and taking on a sort of “sex kitten” persona foisted on her by the higher ups. I thought this was a really solid, fun debut, that sometimes had a bit of a YA feel to it. It’s perfect for those who came of age in the 90’s or are fans of music from that era. Amber and her contemporaries will take you right back there and you’ll be rooting for her as you go.