Sunday, September 14, 2025

Top Heavy, by Rhonda DeChambeau

For Esme, the single greatest obstacle in her life is her own body.  She loves to dance, truly coming alive when her body is in motion, but her breasts get in the way.  She can no longer do ballet and when she does interpretative dance, she is always conscious of them.  The other girls in her class make fun of her, so she works extra hard to be an even better dancer to draw attention away.

And it isn't just in dance.  On the street, men leer at her, women look at her like she's a slut.  She crouches over, trying to make herself look small.  She even looked into breast reduction surgery.

But the solution isn't surgical. It is about building self-esteem.  With help from her family and he friends, Esme comes to love herself and to stand up straight and tall. In the face of bullying and a brief sexual assault, she learns to allow herself to be proud and angry.  To use space.  Ultimately, she learns to accept her body and herself.

While this verse novel starts off slow and repeats itself a lot, the pace gradually builds up and as Esme builds self-confidence, the verses become more moving.  Clever typography on some of the better poems captures the dancing movement that brings Esme join adding a delightful dimension to the story.  In the end, an inspirational story for anyone struggling with a body that doesn't look or perform as we wish it did.

Wednesday, September 10, 2025

A Field Guide to Broken Promises, by Leah Stecher

For years, Evie's family has moved every year or so as her mother got promoted to better and better jobs.  But now, Mom says that she's finally landed the perfect position and with luck they won't ever have to move again.  Entering junior high this year, Evie is excited about making friends that she can hold on to.  Because of the constant relocations, her only real friend is Dara, a girl at Jewish summer camp.  With all the potential in front of her, Evie is excited to start school.

When Evie shows up on the first day, she is surprised to see her friend Dara in the first class!  What are the odds that the school that Evie would move to would be the same one that Dara attends? But to her surprise, Dara isn't happy to see her and immediately starts spreading stories that they barely know each other.  Worse, she says that Evie is a stalker and moved here solely to follow Dara.  Hurt by the rejection and the bullying campaign that Dara organizes, Dara becomes convinced that something bad has happened to Dara and Evie starts digging to find out why her best friend has rejected her.

While the story primarily focuses on Evie's desire to fix everything around her and the bad choices she makes to try to achieve this, there's also some room in here for family separation, siblings, and religion.  The story itself is a gentle fast-paced middle reader intended for "reluctant readers" but it isn't dumbed down.  In fact, it takes a pretty sophisticated take on the way that complicated grown-up relationships mess up children (Evie's Dad and Dara'a Mom are definite pieces of work!).  Unfortunately, the grown ups come in at the end and fix almost everything, so only a little bit of the story is about Dara learning some life lessons.

Sunday, September 07, 2025

Nav's Foolproof Guide to Falling In Love, by Jessica Lewis

Nav and Hallie are best friends.  And while Nav is a lesbian and Hallie is bisexual, friends are all that they have ever been.  It's probably just as well because Nav is ARO and Hallie is a hopeless romantic.  But while Nav doesn't want a girlfriend, she can't imagine being apart from Hallie.  When she finds out that Hallie is going to be away this summer attending an academic program, Nav is obsessed with figuring out a way to join her despite her own lack of academic prowess.  

The solution to the problem turns out to be complicated.  Nav finds out that a bright but socially awkward girl named Gia is obsessed with dating Hallie.  Gia will do anything for Nav's help with Hallie. And so a trade is engineered:  Gia (who is attending the same summer program as Hallie) will give Nav her place in the program in exchange for help getting a date with Hallie.  But before that date can happen, Gia needs lots of help.  Nav may not believe in love, but she knows a few things about Hallie.  Through some training and "romance practice" Nav will teach Gia how to woo Hallie.  Everyone wins!

But of course it doesn't work out that way.  The more work that Nav does with Gia, the more they start falling in love with each other.  And in the end, Nav has to admit that she is not as ARO as she thought.  Along the way, all three girls deal with the changes in their lives and personalities, coming to acknowledge that change can be good after all.

The story was fine, but I really disliked the main protagonist.  Nav's irresponsible with absolutely no accountability (as well as no sense of how to charge her phone!).  She treats both her father and Hallie abominably.  She drinks to excess, uses her sexual partners, and skips out on work.  She's judgmental of others while constantly running away from her own faults.  Frankly, Hallie and Gia both deserve better and they probably have some work to do on their own senses of self-esteem.

Tuesday, September 02, 2025

Nothing Bad Happens Here, by Rachel Ekstrom Courage

After the traumatic death of Lucia's best friend, her mother decides that Lucia needs to get away from Pittsburgh for a while.  Mom's been on-line dating a real estate broker who lives on Nantucket and he's invited the two of them to come out for the summer.  It seems like just the thing:  A quiet peaceful place where nothing bad ever happens.  Lucia could be almost bored.

That plan is swept away when Lucia discovers the body of a dead girl on the shore.  She's an unknown -- no one identifies her, no one knows her, but somehow she ended up dead.  Obsessed with not one but two close encounters with death, Lucia starts to sleuth around.  The uber rich kid Tristan seems suspicious. When Lucia finds clues that the girl had been on Tristan's yacht on the night she died, Lucia knows that Tristan is covering up a secret.  Could he have murdered the girl?

The police have lost interest and everyone tries to encourage Lucia to forget about the whole thing.  Everyone, that is, except for three mysterious beautiful girls that Lucia has befriended.  They seem to have a way with men and a kleptomania habit that somehow falls below everyone else's radars.  Who are they?  And why do they want to help Lucia find out who killed the girl?

A lovely amalgam of beach romance, murder mystery, and a little dash of fantasy.  And, of course, a killer reveal of the killer themself.  You'll guess some of the plot twists that come along, but the final one is a total surprise and well worth waiting for.  Many individual parts of the story were weak (Lucia's traumatic backstory is underdeveloped and underutilized, sparring with Tristan and his girlfriend is surprisingly unrewarding, and so on).  It's a long story but thinly told, and editing the story to raise the pace and the tension would have made for a better read.  But nonetheless I enjoyed this story of summer beach fun with corpses!

Thursday, August 28, 2025

Summer Girls, by Jennifer Dugan

Birdie is an obsessed social media influencer who ignominiously crashed her boyfriend's car on a live broadcast (it was justified -- she'd just caught him cheating on her).  As the daughter of a real estate mogul who is gentrifying their summer community -- a quaint small beach town -- she's hardly a popular figure locally.

Cass is the local who long ago swore off having anything to do with "summer girls" (the ones who come to the beach only during the season and then flip you off when they return to their real homes in August.  And as the daughter of the man running a non-profit that fights the aforementioned gentrification, she has every reason to distrust Birdie and her family.

But as a consequence of the car crash, Birdie is forced to give up her socials and Cass is hired to watch over and babysit her.  The two girls initially despise each other but soon enough become good friends and lovers.  That doesn't remove the class-based tensions between them.

With a predictable format and setting, it takes above-average characters to redeem this beach read.  The girls and their class awareness have enough depth to make them interesting to watch.  Unfortunately, the story stumbles at key points as it tries to explain changes that, while necessary for the conclusion, are sudden and implausible.  Having done such a good job of showing why Bridie and Cass should not be able to make peace, the fact that they do needs to be better justified and explained.  The final coming together and Grand Speech is pure Hollywood and felt forced, robbing the story of the emotional punch it called for.

Sunday, August 24, 2025

Love Points to You, by Alice Lin

When Lynda's father gets remarried and Lynda gains a stepsister, it seems like it is Lynda who always has to make the sacrifices.  While Lynda is always having to forego things, the same rules don't seem to apply to her stepsister Josie.  Josie gets a practice room to work on her violin, a private tutor to help her get ready for recitals, and the support of the family to help get her into an elite music program after high school.  While Lynda's Buncleaver series is a minor commercial success already, Linda doesn't get private spaces or private trainers.  And when Lynda brings up wanting to attend RISD, her father demurs that it's too expensive.  So, Lynda realizes that if she's going to succeed, she's going to have to do it all on her own, and in spite of her family.

Good fortune falls into her lap.  Angela, a classmate, is working on an otome game and offers to hire Lynda to draw the characters.  She'll even pay Lynda for the work.  With the hope of gaining exposure (as well as the money), Lynda jumps on board.  She's always been a fan of otome (a choose-your-own-adventure romance video game) and is excited to play a role in creating one.  As the girls develop the game, they also develop a romantic interest in each other.  However, Lynda's ambitions (combined with the resentments she carries from her family) threaten to derail the project and the relationship.

Lynda definitely has a difficult life, but it's one in which she does herself very few favors.  I found it hard to sympathize with her.  She's prickly and quick to jump to negative conclusions, prone to lashing out, and very self-centered.  Flawed characters can be instructive and interesting, especially if they grow over the course of the novel, but Lynda's growth comes late and while I sympathized with her sense of being unfairly treated, her treatment of others was equally horrid.

(I had never heard of otome before reading this story.  No real surprise there as I'm far removed from the target audience.  I enjoyed getting exposed to the phenomenon.)

Thursday, August 21, 2025

Eliza, from Scratch, by Sophia Lee

When a scheduling mishap in her senior year lands Eliza in a Culinary Arts class instead of AP Physics, she worries that her stellar GPA and her shot at being the class salutatorian is endangered.  She needs that AP class and the weight it carries to keep her at the top.  But far worse is that she knows nothing at all about cooking and the likelihood of bombing it is high in her mind.

In class, that proves to be the case.  Worst of all is Wesley, the class's best cook.  With a chip on his shoulder for the times that smart kids like Eliza have looked down on him, he mocks her lack of skills, setting off a battle of wills between them.  While Wesley is most likely to win the end-of-class cooking contest, Eliza is determined to unseat him and prove that she can be brilliant in any subject.  Sure of their talent and success, both of them refuse to cede to each other and predictably fall in love.

But more than a love story, Eliza's search to find a culinary edge sends her to her mother and a rediscovery of her grandmother's cuisine.  Cooking with her mother heals a rift in the family and builds an appreciation in heritage.

Largely formulaic and sparse on surprises, the novel delivers what it promises.  What it may lack in originality, it makes up for with character development -- in particular, the strong chemistry between Eliza and Wesley.  This is the rare case of a really fun and sexy romance, with strong build up and some pretty hot writing.  There's some attempt to bring in bigger themes of classism and cultural elitism, but largely this is a story about two young people learning that there are many ways to succeed in this world.