Catching Jordan
by Miranda Kenneally · Hundred Oaks #1
Female high-school QB navigates senior season, college recruiting, and a love triangle that tests friendship.
The story
Jordan Woods is captain and starting quarterback of a Tennessee powerhouse high-school football team, chasing a state championship and a scholarship to Alabama. When a handsome new transfer joins the squad, Jordan navigates first love, old friendships that suddenly look different, a father who still doesn't want her on the field, and the recruiting clock ticking on her senior season. A voice-driven contemporary YA romance about gender, ambition, and choosing who you want to be.
Age verdict
YA (14+). The low Lexile will tempt purchase for younger readers, but the mature content — frequent strong profanity, a fade-to-black sex scene, locker-room talk, teen drinking — belongs in high school.
Our take
kid-forward YA romance with parent-value in gender critique
What stands out
Each audience's top 3 dimensions. Out of 30 scored per book.
Kids love
- First-chapter grab Strong
In-media-res play-calling opening with punchy voice lands the "I'm girl" reveal at the end of chapter one — stronger first-chapter grab than Divergent (7, factions reveal by mid-Ch1) and on par with The Hunger Games (8, Reaping-day dread that names the world quickly).
- Character voice Strong
Jordan's first-person voice is distinctive, opinionated, and consistent — swearing, football jargon, and self-deprecating asides make her immediately legible; stronger than Divergent's Tris (7, serviceable) and closer to Speak's Melinda (8, voice-as-character).
Parents love
- Stereotype-breaker Exceptional
Female quarterback protagonist is the structural engine — the book actively interrogates gender-in-sports stereotypes, male-coded ambition, and "girl" as handicap vs. identity; stronger stereotype subversion than George (8) and among the clearest cases in the benchmark.
- Emotional sophistication Strong
Emotional sophistication is real — Ty's trauma, Jordan's fear of vulnerability, Henry's quiet devotion, Dad's shame cycle — the book tracks multiple emotional registers at once; comparable to Speak (8) if less interior, above Divergent (6).
Teachers love
- Discussion fuel Solid
Discussion fuel is real — gender in sports, what "strong" means for girls, when does loyalty become self-betrayal, father-daughter dynamics — the book holds up to rigorous discussion. Comparable to Speak (8) at less depth.
- Empathy & self-awareness Solid
Empathy & self-awareness is a genuine strength — the book forces readers to see Henry's hurt through Jordan's blind spot, to sit with Ty's family grief, to recognize Dad's fear — comparable to Speak (8) at less intensity.
✓ Perfect for
- • teen readers who love sports
- • fans of voice-driven first-person narration
- • readers drawn to gender-in-sports themes
- • upper-middle-school and high-school reluctant readers
Not ideal for
readers under 14, families sensitive to profanity, sexual content, or teen drinking
⚠ Heads up
At a glance
- Pages
- 281
- Chapters
- 37
- Words
- 69k
- Lexile
- 710L
- Difficulty
- Easy
- POV
- First Person
- Illustration
- None
- Published
- 2011
- Publisher
- Sourcebooks Fire
- ISBN
- 9781402262272
Mood & style
You'll know it worked when…
Fast-paced with strong hooks chapter-to-chapter; most committed teen readers finish within a week.
If your kid loved "Catching Jordan"
Matched across 30 dimensions — interest hooks, character appeal, tone, pacing, emotional core. Not by what other people bought. By what fits the same reader profile.
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Same genre (realistic fiction). Same pacing (steady clip)
Look Both Ways: A Tale Told in Ten Blocks
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Same genre (realistic fiction). Both warm in tone
The Henna Wars
by Adiba Jaigirdar
Same genre (realistic fiction). Shared humor: self deprecating
Darius the Great Deserves Better
by Adib Khorram
Same genre (realistic fiction). Same emotional weight (moderate)
Patina
by Jason Reynolds
Same genre (realistic fiction). Same pacing (steady clip)
Merci Suárez Can't Dance
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Same genre (realistic fiction). Same pacing (steady clip)
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