To everyone's surprise, it turns out Summer has family to help her. Her cousin Olu, whom Summer barely knows, has made it big in Japan as a singer and is willing to take Summer in. However, Olu is only twenty and has big issues of her own. While Olu is wealthy enough to take care of Summer, she is in no position emotionally to handle the responsibility and Summer is simply counting down the days until she turns eighteen.
For Summer, it's all a bit too much. In denial about being abandoned, she can't navigate the waves of big feels she has. The wear and tear of spending the past year scraping by has also taken its toll. And now, with her friends graduating and going away to college, Summer is aware that everyone is moving on and abandoning her.
I enjoyed the unusual ethnicity of the characters (Summer's Nigerian and Olu is Nigerian-Japanese). Summer's love for skateboarding is a bit quirky and her resourcefulness in using it and the city busses to get around is pretty unusual. However, the novel annoyed me with the way it dragged out the story through Summer's stubbornness, the inability of characters to finish important conversations, and the eventual swift resolution of all of the problems in the last twenty pages. I didn't see the growth and it felt artificial.
No comments:
Post a Comment