Sunday, July 27, 2025
Spoon, by Stephanie Peters
Friday, July 25, 2025
Camila Núñez's Year of Disasters, by Miriam Zoila Perez
But while the story is excellent, the writing itself feels clunky. Written like it was Camila's diary, much of the prose is broken sentences and awkward tenses. That gives the story telling some authenticity but it isn't an engaging presentation. Her life as a gender queer Cuban American is well-depicted but pedantic and distracting. The strengths of the novel are more traditional features: an interesting protagonist who experiences growth and learns life's lessons.
Sunday, July 20, 2025
Bye Forever, I Guess, by Jodi Meadows
Then one day she receives one of her own. The sender is charming and she starts chatting with him. When she learns that he likes to do on-line roleplaying, she invites him to join her game. Soon enough, they are falling for each other.
What they don't initially realize (although he figures it out before she does) is that they are actually classmates. And so a series of set ups occur where the two of them have near misses. In the end of course all is revealed and a number of other loose ends including vanquishing a bully ensue.
It's cute and fast-paced, but it's hard to accept that Ingrid could overlook all of the clues regarding her online friend's identity. There is also a mismatch between the characters' ages and the way they behave. While there's a token effort to portray Ingrid's adolescent insecurity, she does a remarkable job of dispatching her tormenting ex-friend. Her feelings for the mystery boy are strikingly level-headed (and his reciprocal feelings are equally grown up). They simply don't sound like middle schoolers.
Sunday, July 13, 2025
While We're Young, by K. L. Walther
Sunday, July 06, 2025
True Life in Uncanny Valley, by Deb Caletti
Friday, July 04, 2025
The Song of Us, by Kate Fussner
At a party, Eden tries spinning the bottle and kissing boys and when Olivia finds out, cruel recriminations ensue. But then Olivia has regrets and tries to win Eden back. But Eden is trying to fix herself by learning how to fit in with a popular clique. Back and forth they go, sorting out their feelings about relationships and about each other through verse and song. And while Olivia tries to win Eden back with a grand gesture, in the end the reality is that at their age important decisions will be made by others.
A beautiful and bittersweet verse novel about first love and the sorts of mistakes we make in middle school. I didn't see the intended retelling of the myth of Orpheus and Eurydice that the blurb promised, but I didn't need to. What I found was a very sweet romance and two girls willing to fight for it. Ofttimes creative verse is an added benefit. Delightful!