Sunday, January 25, 2026

Book Review: "Half His Age" by Jennette McCurdy

“How does one know their worth? What constitutes worth? I’m seventeen with bad grades. I live in a nine-hundred-square-foot apartment with a single mom. Most of the things I ingest are sold in a 7-Eleven. And I know people say worth is a thing you’re born with, a thing you just intrinsically have by nature of being a human being, but I’m not so sure. People are too precious about what it means to be human. We’re just people.”

Waldo is a high school senior who is in many ways wise beyond her years, but in other ways she is a needy 17-year-old desperate for love and to be noticed. She practically raised her own mother, whose emotional ups and downs correlated with whether or not she was in a relationship. But Waldo never lets anything stand in the way of getting what she wants.

And what she wants is Mr. Korgy, her writing teacher. He’s 40, married with a young son, has a bit of a paunch, and definitely is showing signs of aging, but none of that matters to Waldo. Mr. Korgy makes her feel seen, and that intensifies her desire for him.

Waldo sets about her plan to seduce her teacher. But it’s not just about sexual conquest—she feels that she can learn so much from him, and he can help her feel better about herself. And while he tries to resist her flirtatious advances, he starts to see her as an oasis from his exhausting life.

Will they get caught in the throes of passion? Will he abandon his wife and son for Waldo? And is this really what she wants from her life?

Obviously the main concept of this book is a bit troubling, since Mr. Korgy is an adult and should know better. But this is a powerful look at how it feels to get what you want at someone else’s expense. Is the grass always greener?

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