Rating: ★★★☆☆ (3.5/5)
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.
On the surface, Bad Girl: Confessions of a Teenage Delinquent looks like another entry in the long line of “troubled teen” exploitation fare—think Kids meets Jawbreaker with a dash of Girl, Interrupted . But beneath its spiked necklace and smudged eyeliner, this confessional narrative (whether a memoir or a roman à clef) attempts something more dangerous: empathy for the unrepentant.