The Black Flamingo
by Dean Atta
A lyrical verse novel about a mixed-race British teenager finding himself through poetry and drag.
The story
From his sixth birthday wish for a Barbie to a university stage in heels, Michael — son of a Greek-Cypriot mother and a largely-absent Jamaican father — navigates first crushes, shifting friendships, and the loneliness of fitting nowhere cleanly. Dean Atta braids Jamaican patois, Greek words, and performance-ready poems into a coming-of-self story that refuses to let any one community claim only half of him.
Age verdict
Best for 14-17; the book is clearly calibrated for older teens rather than middle-grade readers.
Our take
literary_classroom_favorite
What stands out
Each audience's top 3 dimensions. Out of 30 scored per book.
Kids love
- Heart-punch Exceptional
Scenes like the nineteen-second-hug count, an absent father's phone-call refusal, and a late-book fantasy-then-reality rewrite devastate a teen reader. Emotional impact is in the top bracket for verse YA, similar to The Poet X.
- First-chapter grab Strong
The prologue's fairy-tale self-crowning ('I am the prince and the princess... I am my own wicked witch and fairy godmother') pulls teen readers in within a single page; the zookeeper-flamingo fact that follows closes the hook on longing. Verse-novel entry-point similar to Long Way Down.
Parents love
- Stereotype-breaker Exceptional
A mixed Jamaican / Greek-Cypriot, gay, drag-performing, poetry-writing British boy simultaneously breaks multiple single-origin stereotypes — a full stack of identity combinations rarely carried by one YA protagonist. Representational ambition similar to The Hate U Give.
- Emotional sophistication Exceptional
A fantasy-then-reality rewrite of a late confrontation teaches readers to distinguish wish from world, and a best-friend's coming-out reframes earlier homophobia as self-hate. Adult-literary emotional complexity delivered gently, similar to The Poet X.
Teachers love
- Discussion fuel Exceptional
A 'preference or racism?' seafront conversation, an 'is this appropriation?' hair debate, and a frank specific-lesbophobia scene at a gay club are discussion grenades that light up any seminar. Discussion density similar to The Hate U Give.
- Read-aloud power Strong
The 'I Come From' anaphora and the House-of-Mirrors palindrome are built for performance; the verse format rewards aloud reading throughout. Classroom-performance potential similar to Long Way Down.
✓ Perfect for
- • Teens who loved Jason Reynolds's or Elizabeth Acevedo's verse novels
- • Readers looking for LGBTQ+ coming-of-age stories with literary craft
- • Mixed-heritage teens looking for themselves on the page
- • English students studying poetry as form in GCSE / A-level
- • Young writers and performers interested in poetry, drag, and self-expression
Not ideal for
Readers under 13 — mature content includes a graveyard scene with drug use and loss of consciousness, a non-graphic but present sexual encounter, on-page homophobic slurs, and sustained discussion of internalised racism that require a YA-ready reader.
⚠ Heads up
At a glance
- Pages
- 368
- Chapters
- 12
- Words
- 32k
- Difficulty
- Moderate
- POV
- First Person
- Illustration
- Sparse
- Published
- 2019
- Illustrator
- Anshika Khullar
Mood & style
You'll know it worked when…
Short verse pages and phone-native text-message chapters keep momentum through the heavier middle; most teen readers who start finish within two or three sittings.
If your kid loved "The Black Flamingo"
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.
Changers Book One: Drew
by T Cooper, Allison Glock-Cooper
Same genre (realistic fiction). Both bittersweet in tone
The Poet X
by Elizabeth Acevedo
Same genre (realistic fiction). Same pacing (measured)
The Henna Wars
by Adiba Jaigirdar
Same genre (realistic fiction). Both bittersweet in tone
Darius the Great Deserves Better
by Adib Khorram
Same genre (realistic fiction). Both bittersweet in tone
Almost American Girl: An Illustrated Memoir
by Robin Ha
Same genre (realistic fiction). Both bittersweet in tone
Ivy Aberdeen's Letter to the World
by Ashley Herring Blake
Same genre (realistic fiction). Same tension source (identity crisis)
Want more picks like this?
Get 5 hand-picked book reviews for your child's age — one email a month.