![]() ![]() Overall, Yolk was somewhat of a masterpiece to me. ![]() They might not always like one another, but the love runs so much deeper, and they’re finding that, purely, means the most. Even when things get crazier when Jayne finds out something June has been hiding, she knows they need each other. The sisters with heavy baggage and complicated history come together in a unique, very sisterly way, because June is sick, she needs Jayne, and that changes things-it moves mountains. But then June is diagnosed with uterine cancer. June has the high-life-an amazing job, incredible apartment, and is doing pretty well for herself money-wise-basically everything that Jayne doesn’t have. ![]() She barely attends fashion school, sailing through New York days and nights with a sinking feeling of repeating behaviours she knows aren’t right, just hoping that people will like her-that they’ll stay-battling demons that resurface from childhood and present day, when her estranged older sister, June, comes back into her orbit. If it wasn’t enough to have a complex relationship with her family and friends, she also has a warped one with her own body, which was one of the first red-flag things I picked up on as I got to know her as our main character. ![]() Jayne has been struggling for a long time. ![]()
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