Review of ‘The Jump’

The Jump takes four teens throughout Seattle as they try to win a high-stakes scavenger hunt and save their community.


Okay, now The Jump definitely has potential, but a lot about the novel felt forced and unrealistic.

Lacking Grounding

The novelโ€™s biggest issue was that it felt like every character was supposed to be โ€œspecialโ€ but really just felt shoehorned into the story.

I appreciate the authorโ€™s desire for a wildly diverse cast of characters. However, it feels very surface-level.

Take Spider, for example, our Asian trans character, the group hacker. As readers, we know a little more about Spider, but it feels very surface-level. The book is too short to maintain the quick, high-stakes pace, which takes away from getting to the core of the characters.

And this goes for all the characters, Yas, our queer Middle Eastern parkour star, and Han, our Caucasian character who suffers from mental illness. Again, we donโ€™t get to deal with who they are, and itโ€™s harmful to the plot because we canโ€™t connect to the characters. As for Han, even by the end, I still had no idea what mental illness he was dealing with. It was touched upon once in one chapter when they discussed his mom leaving, and thatโ€™s it.

Most of the characters get this treatment of turmoil mentioned only once and then the door shut on it to focus on the plot.

Because of that, they felt two-dimensional. Representation is great, but if youโ€™re going to do it, do it right by giving the characters depth and delving into their identity to make it matter.

Another struggle I had with the novel was that it felt very unrealistic. I read all types of books to escape reality, but something has to ground me in the world the author is creating.

These teenagers are part of a scavenger hunt. Still, the scavenger hunt takes a quick turn when The Order, an online vigilante group, takes over the online forum.

This is where things started to get weird and outlandish. Iโ€™m all for high stakes, but there also has to be some level of believability for me, or at least the characters have to rise to the challenge in a way that makes sense.

The stakes skyrocket, and the characters, normal teenagers, are soon found leaping from tall buildings exploding beneath them in downtown Seattle!

It was wholly outlandish and came out of left field, considering how the story began as realistic before quickly turning into this action film.

Final Thoughts

I think The Jump could have been reworked to have been longer, giving more time to develop the character and building the plot better so that the ending made more sense.

Rating: 3 out of 5.



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