Synopsis:
In Bosch, loyalty isn’t just earned—it’s tested. Grey Shima has her future all planned out: graduate, enlist, and follow in the footsteps of her fearless mother, Master Commander Kat Wallace. But when Grey meets the magnetic, passionate Edmund Sinclair, her world tilts.
He’s not just another boy with good hair and dangerous ideas—he’s a revolutionary, dead set on exposing the ugly truth behind the glittering power that fuels Bosch. Caught between love and legacy, Grey finds herself questioning everything: her training, her purpose, and her heart.
But she’s not alone. Sy Mercer, Grey’s best friend, has stood by her side for years. Smart, steady, and secretly in love with her, Sy sees the danger Grey can’t—or won’t—acknowledge. As Grey spirals deeper into a movement that may not be what it seems, Sy must confront his own fears and decide how far he’s willing to go to protect her… even if it means losing her.
Because love, like revolution, is rarely without sacrifice
In a postapocalyptic world rebuilding from ruin, For the Love of Glitter is a YA speculative romance about betrayal, resistance, and finding your true north-even when everything else is falling apart.
Favorite Lines:
“It was the month I stopped believing that everything would be okay and everyone would always be safe.”
“He took a deep inhale and smiled anyway, because some people were worth loving— even if they never looked back.”
“Checking myself in the mirror, I don’t see the girl who left home for her birthday. Nor the woman I though I’d become that night with Edmund either. I’m something in between. Sharper. Less trusting. Wiser.”
“I always had a hope. You, Grey Shima, are why I made it a plan.”
My Opinion:
I received a copy of this book from the author in exchange for my honest opinion.
For the Love of Glitter is one of those YA novels that quietly disarms you before you realize how deeply it’s going to dig. It opens in the warmth of everyday life—board games, siblings, familiar teasing—but the comfort never feels accidental. Instead, it becomes the contrast that sharpens everything else. From the beginning, Branson establishes that Grey Shima’s world is one where safety is conditional and adulthood arrives early. Grey isn’t rebelling for the sake of noise; she’s reacting to knowledge she can’t unlearn. The book understands that once innocence cracks, it doesn’t shatter all at once—it splinters slowly, shaping how you move through everything that follows.
What makes the story especially compelling is how seamlessly the political and the personal are braided together. Glitter isn’t just a substance or an economic engine—it’s a moral inheritance. Grey’s frustration with adults who insist on nuance feels achingly real, especially when those adults are loving, competent, and still wrong. Her anger isn’t reckless; it’s focused. And that focus is mirrored and softened by Sy Mercer, whose quiet loyalty provides emotional ballast throughout the novel. Sy’s presence never competes with Grey’s voice, but it deepens it, giving the reader a constant reminder of what’s at stake emotionally when ideals collide with relationships.
The arrival of Edmund Sinclair complicates everything in exactly the way it should. He is charisma and ambition wrapped in righteous language, and Branson is careful not to make him a cartoon villain. Instead, Edmund represents the seductive pull of movements that promise clarity and purpose, even when they’re built on half-truths. Watching Grey fall under his spell is uncomfortable in the best way; the reader can see both the empowerment and the danger long before Grey does while feeling the emotional pain from Sy as he watches it all unfold.
By the time the story reaches its final chapters, For the Love of Glitter has matured alongside its protagonist shifting from a com-of age to reckoning. The narrative widens, revealing that resistance doesn’t always look like refusal—it can also look like patience, planning, and legacy. The ending resists neat resolution, opting instead for something more honest: a future shaped by intention rather than certainty. It’s a conclusion that honors teenage idealism without pretending that change happens quickly or cleanly.
Summary:
Overall, For the Love of Glitter is a character-driven YA novel about activism, first love, and moral awakening in a world built on compromise. Through Grey Shima’s fierce voice, the book explores how systems harm, how movements seduce, and how growing up often means learning that change is slow—but still worth fighting for. Tender, politically sharp, and emotionally honest, this is a story that trusts its teenage characters with real complexity and trusts its readers to sit with it. Happy reading!
Check out For the Love of Glitter here!