Sunday, October 12, 2025

After the Wallpaper Music, by Jean Mills

Flora and her three friends are the Arden String Quartet, a talented group of middle schoolers.  They are always getting asked to perform at school functions (parents nights, etc.) -- the veritable "wallpaper music" group.  So, when the school announces a Battle of the Bands, the Quartet will of course play a piece.  But they struggle to decide what they should play.  Flora wants to play a traditional classical quartet while the other want to play music from a video game.  They settle that dispute amicably, but when Flora gets asked by a new boy to play in his band as well, jealousies appear and Flora is faced with conflicting loyalties that are harder to resolve.

Alongside that drama, Flora's aunt who lives with them has a health scare and Flora has to face the fact that people get older and people get sick.  From this she learns the healing power of music in giving people a means to come together and enjoy each other in the face of adversity.

A mixture of themes that ultimately tackles the topic of loss and grief rather more successfully than the interpersonal conflicts that Flora must contend with.  I liked the various different ways that music is brought up in the story, ranging from its role in cultural identity to the effects of fame for those who make it big.  In the face of all the different ideas brought up in the story, the lack of a nice neat ending felt right.

Wednesday, October 08, 2025

Skipshock, by Caroline O'Donoghue

Traveling alone on the train from Cork to Dublin, Margo nearly passes out and suddenly finds herself in another world.  In danger from the very start, a trader named Moon rescues her and smuggles her off the train at their next stop. Margo learns that she has been transported from Ireland to a universe where multiple worlds exist, each one with a different length of day.  The most desirable southern worlds have 24-hour days and the least (and northernmost) have days as short as two hours.  Travel on the trains (the only remaining way to get between worlds) is strictly controlled and northerners are largely cut off altogether.  Unrest is everywhere.

Margo and Moon learn that her arrival is not entirely coincidence.  Margo is carrying an antique watch that once belonged to her late father.  In ways that they do not fully understand, Margo and the watch have the power to disrupt travel -- a power that the south desperately wants to have.  Chased between worlds, the two of them must unlock the mystery while evading capture.  All around them the old order is disintegrating and inter-world revolution is brewing.

A feisty adventure fantasy with a dash of romance.  I liked the role of day length as a world-builder and there's some thought given to how shorter days (and shorter lifespans would affect a world).  The author does great exposition, but the pace is so fast that things get destroyed as fast as they get introduced.   At the same time, there's a fairly large number of characters and a high body count. Hopefully, the planned sequel will explore some of the unfinished business instead of creating more stuff.  The pace flags at times as characters get involved in lengthy conversations. This is not a story that benefits from chit chat.

Sunday, October 05, 2025

Gay the Pray Away, by Natalie Naudus

For most of her life, Valerie's family has been part of a conservative Christian religious community.  And to keep her away from rival ideas, she's been homeschooled and strictly segregated from outside influences.  No television.  Supervised internet access.  Parental review of her reading and friendships.  She notes the way all the rules seem to favor her brother and she sometimes doubts whether she really believes that Jesus wants her to do little more than raise babies, but she's accepted that these are just the way things are.

And then a new girl named Riley and her mother joins the congregation. Riley is free spirited, outspoken, and amazingly beautiful.  Valerie has only ever known homosexuality as a vile sin.  The idea that she might like a girl is confusing.  And when she finds out Riley likes her, it is a revelation.  Suddenly, the world that Valerie has known seems too limited and too restrictive.  She wants more and she may have to abandon everything to get it.

Drawing on her own personal experiences with growing up in a Fundamentalist family, there's a didactic mission in the storytelling.  I didn't mind the agenda as much as the way Valerie herself is portrayed.  For a young woman indoctrinated for so many years, she seemed awfully articulate about her ideology.  There's some attempt to explain this by having Valerie spending time in the public library sneaking in lots of reading.  However, few adolescents are this well-spoken and her voice sounded informed for a few extra years on the outside.  That makes Naudus's point for her easier, but by depriving Valerie of authenticity.  

The story dwells on all the things that are wrong with this isolated community, but misses chances to explain why it works for the people trapped within it.  I'm fascinated by Valerie's Taiwanese mother and we are teased at points by Valerie's observations of why being a believer serves her mother's needs, but so much more could have been done with it.  Valerie's brother and her best friend Hannah are also interesting cases in alternative paths tread that could have been expanded to fill out Valerie's journey.  All opportunities lost for a slow and largely repetitive list of the community's faults.

Thursday, October 02, 2025

The Otherwhere Post, by Emily J Taylor

Maeve has been hiding her true identity for the past seven years.  Her father, a scriptomancer, brought infamy on her family by causing the destruction of the world of Inverly.  That he and his wife died in the process, leaving Maeve an orphan, did not matter.  So great was the anger at his memory that Maeve quickly found that hiding who she was was necessary to stay alive.  But then one day she receives an anonymous letter that states that her father may have been innocent.

To find the author of the letter and the evidence that could exculpate her father, she must find a way into the school where scriptomancers are trained.  At great risk, she poses as an apprentice under a stolen identity and uncovers a series of mysteries that not only tell the truth of what actually happened seven years ago, but also point to a way of rebuilding the lost world of Inverly.  Within a richly drawn world of magic and steeped with intrigue, Maeve and her young cohorts must force secrets into the open to rehabilitate her family name.

There's lots of creativity behind the world that Taylor has created for this story and Maeve makes a compelling protagonist.  For the most part, this is an immersive and addictive read.  Unfortunately, the story gets severely compressed at the end with a series of convenient losses of consciousness and subsequent digested recaps.  Whether this is because Taylor struggles with writing climactic scenes or she simply ran out of pages, it steals a lot of the dramatic build up of the story to cram several months' worth of developments into a ten page summary.

Thursday, September 25, 2025

The Complex Art of Being Maisie Clark, by Sabrina Kleckner

Maisie, at eighteen, has absorbed everything she can learn about painting portraits from her parents, but she longs to develop a style that is her own.  All of her work looks more or less the same as her father's.  So, she decides to leave New York and study art in London, focusing on every medium except painting in a conscious effort to stretch herself.

The new school year starts off inauspiciously as she nearly gets thrown out of photography class and then accidentally almost maims a fellow student.  But all of these things lead to adventures, some hilarious, some poignant as her term promises new adventures and even a possible romance.

Then an emergency sends her back home to help her parents and she finds that she's grown far more in her time in London than she realized.  And, in fact, her art and her life overall has begun to bloom in its own ways after all.

A lively NA novel whose first half is much better than its second.  The cause of that is that the book is in fact a sequel, albeit an unusual one.  Maisie was first introduced to readers in Kleckner's Art of Running Away in which Maisie is only twelve and dealing with a difficult older brother.  And while the first half of this current novel introduces new characters, the second half leans heavily upon details from the earlier novel from six years earlier.  Without that background, elements of the current story are hard to follow and it fails to stand up on its own.

Thursday, September 18, 2025

This Book Might Be About Zinnia, by Brittney Morris

In the present day, Zinnia is working on her admission essay for Harvard but it isn't coming together.  Zinnia's decided to write about being adopted, but it isn't enough and a reader has advised her that it needs something to give it a stronger impact.  Zinnia struggles with what to do until she starts to read the latest book from her favorite author.  In that novel, the protagonist is given up by her mother and has a distinctive heart-shaped birthmark on her forehead.  So does Zinnia.  There are other similarities and Zinnia begins to wonder if the author is also her birth mother.

Eighteen years early, Tuesday was a pregnant teenager who made the agonizing decision to put her baby up for adoption.  During the pregnancy she was largely abandoned by her family and she poured her heart into a journal.  In the aftermath of the adoption, the journal was lost.  In two parallel storylines. the truth about what happened comes to light, impacting far more than Zinnia and her search.

The adoption story is interesting and beautifully told, but there's an awful mess of subplots that distract this story.  Everything from the nature of the author of the novel to Tuesday's family's mysterious connection to the mob.   There's arson at the adoption agency, an accidental drowning, and an implied murder.  Never mind the mess of an ending with an implausible manhunt and a bizarre hallucinatory episode.  The promise of a surprise ending that is never revealed and the introduction of characters in the final pages that play no part in the story left me confused and frustrated.  I want to like this story but it needed an editor with the will to trim this train wreck down!

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.