However, Bad Girl suffers from its own authenticity. The fragmented style becomes exhausting by the midway point. Just when a narrative thread begins to form—a potential redemption arc with a sympathetic art teacher, or a genuine friendship with a fellow delinquent named Dove—the book deliberately burns it down. While this is thematically consistent (chaos resists narrative), it makes for frustrating reading.
Where the book excels is its unapologetic voice. Riley is not a secret sweetheart. She is manipulative, angry, and often cruel. She steals from friends who try to help her and mocks the concept of therapy. This refusal to sanitize teenage delinquency is the work’s greatest strength. The prose is jagged and visceral; one passage about shoplifting a pack of cigarettes while dissociating from her own body is as good as anything in Denis Johnson’s Jesus’ Son .
The author clearly understands the psychology of a girl who has weaponized her own vulnerability. The chapters set in juvie, particularly a brutal scene involving a riot over a pair of sneakers, are pulse-poundingly real. You won’t find a “very special episode” moral here. Bad Girl- Confessions Of A Teenage Delinquent
Rating: ★★★☆☆ (3.5/5)
Bad Girl: Confessions of a Teenage Delinquent is not an easy read. It will trigger content warnings for self-harm, substance abuse, and sexual assault. It will also anger readers looking for a neat lesson about “finding your light.” However, Bad Girl suffers from its own authenticity
Fans of We Need to Talk About Kevin , true-crime psychology, and anyone who has ever wondered what happens before the arrest. Not recommended for: Those seeking trigger-free comfort reads, linear plots, or a protagonist you’d want to babysit your kids.
But for those willing to sit in the muck of a teenager’s worst impulses, the book offers something rare: a mirror held up to the delinquent not as a caricature, but as a fully realized, broken human being. It is a flawed, messy, and important scream into the void. She is manipulative, angry, and often cruel
The story follows 16-year-old Riley “Riot” McKenna over one school year in a decaying rust-belt town. After a petty theft escalates into arson, Riley is shunted between a neglectful mother’s trailer, a revolving door of foster homes, and a juvenile detention center that feels less like rehabilitation and more like a crime academy. The “confessions” are told in fragmented diary entries, court transcripts, and raw, second-person monologues directed at an absent father.