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Jett Cooper
Posted by Literary Titan

In Jett Cooper by MAC Hill, a young teen in rural Australia is chasing the one thing that makes him feel most alive: flying. Jett is training with his dad, Jack, and dreaming of the Blue Wolf Junior Air Competition, where a scholarship to a flying academy could change everything. Then Jack dies in a crash, and the story pivots hard into grief, blame, and a family that cannot agree on what “safe” should look like. Jett keeps getting pulled between school, his mum’s fear, and the competition he still wants more than he wants to admit. The air show weekend builds to a mid-race emergency when Ella’s plane sheds part of its wing, and Jett has to choose between finishing and helping her get down alive.
What grabbed me first was how confidently Hill writes the flying. It is detailed, but it does not feel like she is showing off. When Jett talks about the stick, rudder, and the way the air feels, you can almost feel the cockpit tighten around you. I also appreciated the simple tools she uses to keep you oriented, like the air show map and the racecourse layout. It sounds small, but it really helps the action land, especially when the racing gets fast and messy. Even the author’s note about Australian English made me smile, because it signals the book’s voice early: grounded, local, and not trying to flatten itself for anyone.
This is a young adult sports-adventure with a coming-of-age core, and it works in that lane because the competition structure is clear and the stakes keep rising, but the real pressure is emotional. The book does not rush past the shock of loss. There’s a line about grief feeling like “running in waist-high water,” and that’s exactly how the early chapters read, in a good way. I found the mum-son conflict believable even when it hurt to watch. She is terrified, he is stubborn, and neither of them has the full language for what’s going on underneath. And then Hill makes a smart, character-revealing call in the final stretch: Jett’s need to win is real, but the moment he hears “Mayday” and realizes Ella is in trouble, you can see his priorities rearrange in real time.
By the end, the book lands in a place that feels earned, with scholarships offered, big decisions made, and relationships shifting instead of snapping neatly back into place. I’d recommend Jett Cooper most to readers who like YA competition stories with real heart: people who enjoy training arcs, rivals, and high-stakes events, but also want family tension and grief handled with care. If you like aviation, you will like this book. If you do not know a thing about planes, I still think the emotions and momentum will carry you through an enjoyable story.
Pages: 308 | ASIN : B0FPXHJR8F
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Brad Graham, Children's Motor Sports Books, childrens action adventure, childrens book, childrens chapter book, childrens fiction, coming of age, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, Jett Cooper, kindle, kobo, literature, Melanie Hill, middle-grade, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, writer, writing, young adult




