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Puffin · MMXXVI
Bim Blake's Hot Takes
Tolá Okogwu
Illustrated · ages 9–12

Bim Blake's Hot Takes

My Pencil Case Doesn't Define Me

Written by Tolá Okogwu · Illustrated by Ariyana Taylor

Book 1 of 2 in Bim BlakeView the full series

Adults love it too

A warm, funny, highly illustrated diary about starting Year Seven, from the bestselling author of Onyeka. Bim navigates first crushes, first bras and maths misery while quietly carrying the loss of her mum three years earlier.

  • Best for9–12
  • FormatIllustrated
  • Length304 pp
  • Read aloud~2 hr

The vibe

What it’s like.

Style

  • Comedic
  • Conversational
  • Epistolary

Tone

  • Funny
  • Warm
  • Heartwarming
  • Bittersweet

Themes

On the pagestarting secondary school, friendship drama, first crush, loss of a parent, growing up, black british family

Experience meters

Energy4/ 5
Humour5/ 5
Scariness1/ 5
Peril1/ 5
Wonder2/ 5
Cosiness3/ 5
Emotional intensity3/ 5
Conceptual intensity2/ 5

What’s it about?

The story.

"My name's Bim Blake. I've just started high school and here's my hot take on it: Year Seven is a LOT harder than I thought!" So begins Bim's diary as she navigates a brand-new school and all the chaos that comes with it: getting a first bra, an uncooperative school skirt, ongoing maths misery, a first crush and endless friendship drama. At home she lives with her dad and three brothers, and beneath the jokes runs the quiet ache of her mum, who died of cancer three years ago and whom Bim hasn't really gotten over. Tolá Okogwu, bestselling author of Onyeka and the Academy of the Sun, launches a relatable, slice-of-life tween series that is genuinely funny and full of heart, with gorgeous illustrations by Ariyana Taylor throughout. Perfect for fans of Dork Diaries, Lottie Brooks and Nina Peanut, it balances laugh-out-loud comedy with an honest, gently handled portrait of growing up and grief.

Fit check

Right for your child?

Where it lands by age

A 9-12 independent read in a fast, illustrated diary format, ideal for children starting or dreading secondary school. The comedy carries younger tweens, while the thread of grief for a parent gives it real emotional weight for older, more sensitive readers.

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  • Best fit · 9–12
  • Read aloud · 9–12
  • Independent · 9–12

Prose load

Light

Visual support

Moderate

Reluctant-reader friendly

Very

Read-aloud quality

Workable

Works well for

  • Reading together
  • Reluctant readers
Moderate sensitivity3 content warnings

Preview before sharing if a child is sensitive to: grief, death of parent, illness or disability.

Bedtime suitability

3 / 5 · Workable

Sensitive-child

2 / 5 · Use judgement

Graphic intensity

1 / 5 · None

Best for

  • Funny diary
  • Starting secondary school
  • Reluctant readers
  • Inclusive representation

Avoid if

  • Sensitive to parental death
  • Wants gentle bedtime

Particularly good for children who are…

  • Moving to secondary school
  • Bereavement
  • Making friends

Why it lands

Why they love it.

Why kids love it

Bim's diary is packed with the real cringe of starting high school: first bras, maths sets, crushes and friendship fallouts, all told with brilliant comic timing. Kids feel completely seen, and the illustrations make every page a fast, funny read.

  • Friendship and belonging
  • Being understood finally
  • Proving yourself

Why parents love it

From the author of Onyeka, this slice-of-life diary nails the comedy of starting secondary school while handling Bim's grief for her late mum with real tenderness. Warm, inclusive and reassuring, it's a lovely, layered read for tweens finding their feet.

  • Shared humour
  • Cultural representation
  • Conversation starter

In the series

Bim Blake.

2 books · open the series →

About the creators

About the creators.

If you liked this

Three ways out of this book.

Last reviewed · July 2026Suggest a correctionHow we recommend

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