The poisoned tea was not a random act. Bricks of it were found throughout the kingdom. It is clear that it was part of a bigger plot to destabilize the empire, but who is behind that? As a country girl, Ning is quickly out of her depth as she finds herself deep in court intrigue, but she has good instincts and hidden strengths that surprise her as she gathers friends and supporters (as well as making new enemies). In comparison to the plots against the emperor and his daughter, winning the contest may become an afterthought, but it too is tied in with this struggle for power.
Monday, October 03, 2022
A Magic Steeped in Poison, by Judy I Lin
The poisoned tea was not a random act. Bricks of it were found throughout the kingdom. It is clear that it was part of a bigger plot to destabilize the empire, but who is behind that? As a country girl, Ning is quickly out of her depth as she finds herself deep in court intrigue, but she has good instincts and hidden strengths that surprise her as she gathers friends and supporters (as well as making new enemies). In comparison to the plots against the emperor and his daughter, winning the contest may become an afterthought, but it too is tied in with this struggle for power.
Saturday, October 01, 2022
Daughter, by Kate McLaughlin
From the visit, Scarlet learns that her father (who she always thought was a deadbeat) is actually an infamous psychopathic mass murderer, who went to jail when she was only two years old. In order to escape intense media scrutiny, her mother took her and fled, assuming a new identity. Now, the man is dying and he has promised to reveal the identity and final whereabouts of hitherto unknown victims. But only if he can see his daughter.
Once Scarlet gets over the shock of finding out her true identity, she's repulsed by the idea of meeting such a man, even if he is her biological father. The FBI, however, are eager to get her to do it. There are dozens of cases that they suspect are tied to the man and solving even a few of those cases would make a world of difference to the victims' families. Conflicted between the desire to maintain some privacy and a feeling of obligation to the victims, she goes and meets the monster.
While setting up this implausible scenario takes some work, once McLaughlin gets us through the prerequisites, the rest of the story basically writes itself. It has all of the seductive yuck factor of Silence of the Lambs and it's a page turner from beginning to end. It's precisely that appeal that turns out to be the point in the end. A steady theme throughout is exploring why people are so obsessed with stories like this. Do we just like macabre things or are there people who harbor dark fantasies that they live out through histories like these? And why draws women to men who murder remorselessly?
In addition to such deep and dark ruminations, there's some attempt to work in a romance, but this isn't a story one gets feeling sexy about. Lots of drug references may make some readers more uncomfortable than the grisly subject matter. But overall, this is great entertainment, which is probably proving the author's underlying point.
Sunday, September 25, 2022
Postcards from Summer, by Cynthia Platt
In parallel to Lexi's story is the tale of Lexi's mother Emma (twenty years earlier). At the time, Emma is struggling to convince her parents of her conviction to pursue a career in the arts while her boyfriend Ryan is similarly fighting his ambitious politician father's plans for him. The young people's fates get overtaken by a tragedy that has repercussions to the current day as Emma uncovers as she seeks out who her mother was.
Although some elements of the plot (e.g., the NDA) stretched plausibility, I found the story compelling although to keep reading. I just wished that the story moved more briskly. Both Lexi and Emma suffer from panic attacks, which is mostly manifested in the story through dialogue scenes where nothing actually happens. The typical scene consists of one of them racing to find someone, having nothing to say when they find this person, and then dramatically fleeing afterwards. The times when a character does not say what is on their mind or refuses to say what is on their mind or lies about what is on their mind is frustratingly frequent. A certain amount of drama can be reasonably created from such plot padding devices but at some point one wants to see a breakthrough. As a result, we actually find out surprising little about the characters. Due to everyone's inability to express a complete thought aloud, little information is actually exchanged. Thus, the progress of the story to its conclusion is largely dependent upon the periodic introduction of surprising new facts.
This extremely lengthy (566 page) novel definitely could have benefitted from trimming. It also suffers from a rather higher-than-normal quantity of typographical errors, indicative of a poor final proofreading. This is especially ironic as the author is an editor and trumpets her editorial service in the blurb. This novel makes for an very unfortunate calling card.
Monday, September 12, 2022
The Honeys, by Ryan LaSala
Mars makes that decision with some trepidation. He once attended regularly, but the camp's intolerance for Mars's gender fluidity and a violent hazing incident drove him away. Returning now, he's determined to face the Camp's sexist and obsessive binary culture head on. As expected, he's less than welcome by the boys. But his sister's former cabinmates are surprisingly cordial. Known as "the Honeys" for their mysterious Queen Bee ways and the fact that they tend the camp's bee hives, the girls make Mars feel at home -- inviting Mars to be herself when she's feeling more feminine and providing an alternative to the macho culture of the boys.
But the Honeys are far from benign. Somehow, they are connected with his sister's madness. It all has something to do with the bees. Soon, further disappearances and unfortunate events are taking place. And the longer Mars is at camp, the more and more he notices -- the way that the traditions have become tired, like the way the cabins are becoming decrepit. There is an air of desperation among the administrators. Aspen Conservancy itself is dying and taking the campers with it.
A slow burning but captivating thriller in the tradition of The Wicker Man (with a strong apiary theme), which stumbles a bit at the end when LaSala scrambles to tie up everything as the world crumbles. The bees made a perfect malevolent yet amoral nemesis.
But more than being gothic horror, LaSala truly has worked in Mars's gender identity into the story. These days, it's hard to find a YA novel that isn't full of gender queer protagonists, but most of them are either afterthoughts or the identity issue is the point of the novel. Here, the story truly needs Mars to be gender fluid. His/her ability to drift between the conflicting worlds of the male and female campers is what gives him his insights. And the sexual roles of bees being so different from those of human serve to accentuate Mars's non-binary identity. This is not a book about being binary, but it is a story where it is critical that the key character is everything that Mars is.
Friday, September 09, 2022
Places We've Never Been, by Kasie West
Nothing turns out like she planned. When the trip begins, Skyler gives her the silent treatment and avoids her. For some reason, he obviously can't stand her and now they are stuck together for weeks! Meanwhile, something else is going on. The idea of the trip came from their mothers and there is obviously more to the trip than the lame excuse that they "hadn't seen each other in a while." Even the college interview at the end doesn't quite turn out as she expected. Combine the mystery with Norah and Skyler rediscovering each other and the usual adventures of a road trip featuring iconic sites like Death Valley, Zion, and Yellowstone, and you have yourself a light summer romance.
It doesn't get much more basic than this! Some awkward moments, family squabbles, and the gradual blossoming of adolescent love make a solid story. There are not many surprises and not much to make this book stand out, but West writes solid romance and this one is pleasing in all the right ways.
Tuesday, September 06, 2022
A Kind of Spark, by Elle McNicoll
It doesn't stop them from acting cruelly in the present either. At school, Addie faces bullying from her classmates, actively encouraged by an unsympathetic teacher. And while the worst of it comes mostly from an old friend, Addie is aware that the others felt fine standing back and doing nothing to defend her.
Meanwhile, Addie is concerned about her older sister (who is also autistic) and the problems she is having coping at uni. It would seem that the world has a hard time handling people with differences. The most common reaction is fear and violence.
I enjoyed the book and found it to be one of the better recent novels about autism. I found Addie a wonderful ambassador for neurodiversity. The explanations she provides for how she processes sensory input are straightforward and insightful. Her wise-beyond-her-years maturity made sense in the context of having to deal with so much more at a younger age. Be warned that the abuse scenes are triggering and a bit over-the-top (unless Scotland's current treatment of autism is particularly dire) but certainly add dramatic tension to the story.
Monday, September 05, 2022
The Silence That Binds Us, by Joanna Ho
With the help of a sympathetic teacher and some difficult lessons from her classmates, May learns more about the history of anti-Asian racism, the experiences shared with other minorities and how they differ, and also confronts her only biases. At points this is interesting and educational reading. At other times it can seem like a classic example of the excesses of well-meaning liberals (of the sort that the Right likes to call "wokeness") and a rosy kumbaya conclusion where the kids take over the asylum felt painfully naïve and over-the-top. However, it never ceases to be enlightening, even if the brother's suicide is largely marginalized in the process.
Despite my misgivings, the book is well-written and engaging. The relationship between May and her Black BFF Tiya is complex and fascinating. There are some amazing deeply felt conversations about race and class that largely transcend the story. Obviously, a polemical novel like this is going to alienate a quarter of its potential readership and bore the quarter whom are already convinced, but it's for the other half in the middle that such works are written.
Saturday, September 03, 2022
Saint Ivy: Kind at All Costs, by Laurie Morrison
Meanwhile, Ivy's mantra about helping others seems to be getting her into trouble with her friends. She's picked up an anonymous admirer of sorts who unloads their issues to Ivy through emails. And the more Ivy tries to help this mystery person, the more she neglects her friends and they grow resentful of being shut out. Ivy learns that you can't make everyone happy and that if you don't take care of yourself, you probably won't make anyone happy.
Delightful and brisk middle school story about the important topic (especially for girls) of the pitfalls of self-abnegation. Morrison gently shows how Ivy's behavior is far from benign, both in the way that it leads her to ignore her own needs and in the way that it alienates others. While making clear that it is fine to find satisfaction in making others happy, when the need to do so becomes obsessive the motivations are no longer benevolent, but ironically ego-driven (as Ivy's friends point out to her). Ivy's ability to begin the process of negotiating a compromise between self-caring and other-caring brings the story to a satisfying conclusion.
Tuesday, August 30, 2022
The Girl Who Fell Beneath the Sea, by Axie Oh
In the Spirit Realm where gods, demons, dragons, and many fearsome creatures dwell, Mina finds the Sea God in a deep sleep. And someone is trying to make sure that he stays that way. Making strange alliances, Mina tries to outwit the gods with rather unexpected results. She finds herself locked in a celestial love triangle with enormous implications for both the Spirit Realm and the world above.
A dizzying retelling of a Korean myth that is beautiful done but which I found maddeningly difficult to read. The unfamiliar world of gods and spirits presents quite an initial barrier to overcome. The story unfolds with lots of unexpected surprises (many of which did not make much sense). In the end, I gave up trying and simply let the story carry me along, but I missed out on a lot of things. It didn't help that there is a large cast and not much effort to build the characters. So, I give the story high marks for creativity and vivid world-building, but found it a very difficult slog and nearly impossible to follow.
Sunday, August 28, 2022
Cress Watercress, by Gregory Maguire (ill by David Litchfield)
Beautifully illustrated throughout, the book is quite pretty to flip through, but the story fails to live up to the gorgeous artwork. A series of short adventures (many of them life-threatening) pass in place of an overall story. Add in a jumpy narrative and characters who seemed more designed to deliver one-liners than to actually build a story and I was left unengaged and largely uninterested.
Saturday, August 27, 2022
Karma Khullar's Mustache, by Kristi Wientge
Sunday, August 21, 2022
Stand on the Sky, by Erin Bow
A young Kazakh girl rejects tradition and becomes a champion eagle huntress. Similar to the documentary The Eagle Huntress, thirteen year-old Aisulu struggles against immense odds to develop the skills and the rapport with a golden eagle to not only become a huntress but to compete in the annual Eagle Festival. The stakes in this fictional tale are significantly higher than the film because the prize money from the Festival could cover her crippled brother's medical expenses. Without it, the family will be forced to sell their livestock and abandon their life as nomadic herders on the steppes. Finding allies and friends in unexpected places, Aisulu learns lessons about family and loyalty in a rewarding story of animal bonding and coming of age.
While The Eagle Huntress was (mostly) real, I actually found this novel more realistic. Bow spent considerable time in Mongolia researching the people and their lives and the story is abundant with cultural details. While some critics have decried "cultural appropriation" and I found more than a few Westernizations that rang false, overall the story provides a rich and respectful depiction of daily life and cultural values. The result of that hard work is a deeper, more rewarding story about how Aisulu, through the experience of building a bond with her eagle, in turn builds a stronger bond with her community. More could certainly have been done with this material (for example, her estrangement from her own mother was a frustratingly neglected thread) but the theme gave the story gravitas beyond the single-focused girl-power message of the film.
Saturday, August 20, 2022
Out of Range, by Heidi Lang
Through flashbacks, the story of how they got to this point unfolds. Once the closest of friends, innocent pranks led to hurt feelings and vindictive acts of revenge, escalating to the point where the three girls could not stand each other. Their parents, seeking a way to break through the impasse, send them to survival camp, which is where they end up lost in the woods.
Built on strong and vivid characters, this thrilling survival story for middle readers is a great read. Its messages of forgiveness and cooperation are such no-brainers and the eventual reconciliation between the sisters so predictable that the journey itself becomes the point of the story. I enjoyed it but, as an adult, I wondered about the girls' parents and their seeming inability to help their children navigate their problems. Middle schoolers will simply enjoy a thrilling adventure, the familiar grudges and battles of siblings, and the comfort of the resolution.
Sunday, August 14, 2022
Private Label, by Kelly Yang
Tuesday, August 09, 2022
Daughter of the Pirate King, by Tricia Levenseller
And while her captives think they have the upper hand, she proves them wrong repeatedly as she escapes the brig night after night so she can conduct her search. Captain Draxen is cruel boy and quickly loses his patience with her games, but his more thoughtful, kinder, and (coincidentally) better looking brother Riden in intrigued by her. And while Riden must play his role as her captor, there's no denying the reluctant bond that is forming between them that will involve plenty of bloodshed, some delicious kissing, and lots of respectful intimacy.
While well-paced and entertaining, I never knew quite whether to take it seriously or not. For while Levenseller wants to portray her heroine as a tough and resourceful warrior, she also expends concerted effort in making Alosa the type of girl to whom suburban teens can aspire (obsessed with fashion, loyal to her besties, skilled at keeping boys in their place, etc.). Don't get me wrong, I can fully see the parallels between adolescent girls and bloodthirsty pirates, but the joke's taken a bit far and the silliness detracts from the story. There's also the small matter of magic, which makes an appearance about half-way through the story providing a surprisingly boring reason for Alosa'a extraordinary skills (instead of basing them on Alosa's hard work and determination).
As the first in a series, though, the book really has only one purpose: to entice people to read the rest. So, the book provides a strong introduction to Alosa's character, giving her enough resources and talents to take her boldly into a planned series of adventures of unknown duration. Multiple characters (including Alosa's own band of teen girl pirates) are briefly introduced, giving us a teaser of what awaits when Alosa and her besties set sail in search of wealth and handsome frocks!
Sunday, August 07, 2022
Fight + Flight, by Jules Machias
Sarah suffers from a panic disorder, set off a few years ago by the death of a beloved aunt. While she has a number of coping mechanisms, notably including sketching and doodling, she struggles with an overly protective mother, an emotionally disengaged father, and a very angry older brother.
Their poor coping skills experience an additional setback when their middle school performs an ill-advised realistic active shooter drill that injures Avery and aggravates Sarah's anxieties. But the incident also motivates both girls to take action: Avery funnels her anger at her declining health into a plan to seek revenge against the principal, while Sarah chooses the positive approach of rallying and organizing student opinion. Both of them learn how to better cope with their personal issues through the experience. In a somewhat disjointed way throughout the novel, Machias also addresses transphobia, classism, racial privilege, and bullying.
Machias is a developing talent. I tried unsuccessfully to read her debut novel Both Can Be True, but abandoned it for being clunky and didactic. This is a substantially better novel, but the tendency to stuff the story with largely unrelated topics (Avery's BIPOC friend Mason being the most notable example) suggests that her biggest challenge is keeping focus and knowing which stories she wants to tell. It is unclear if Avery and Sarah were being set up to have a romantic relationship (there's plenty of points in the story where it felt that way), but in the end the idea is largely abandoned.
All this superfluous material takes energy away from the main story (the girls' emotional growing ability to take responsibility for themselves). It's a hard story to tell and didn't work for me in the end. While Machias makes some effort to create a catalyst, Avery's switch from avenging to forgiving is abrupt and her sudden willingness to communicate with adults felt implausibly rushed. Sarah's growing bravery, prompted as much by her older brother as by internal changes, felt more plausible.
But there are also things in the book to love. Avery's feelings of hopelessness are explored well, from her coping method of bossing others around to her denial of her symptoms. The author's realistic portrayals of adults (always a big thing for me!) are much appreciated. But very best of all is the whole design of the book. Told by the girls in alternating chapters, Sarah's doodle-filled pages are a true delight. Every page features original pen and ink drawings from the author, ranging from decorative borders to fanciful animal sketches to beautiful Spirograph creations (Heavens! I had forgotten all about Spirograph!). I strongly recommend spending some time just browsing the pages of this book just for the art!
Thursday, August 04, 2022
This Place is Still Beautiful, by Xixi Tian
But then a seemingly random act of vandalism, where an ethnic slur is spraypainted on their garage door, changes things. Margaret is upset and wants to call out the attack, seek justice, and challenge the entire town's complacency. Annelie wants to bury the matter and forget about it. However, when she finds out that she may know the perpetrators, she has to make some difficult decisions about her choices.
While the incident is a catalyst, the story is less about racism than about identity, as Margaret and Annelie work through their feelings about their family, their friends, and each other. And those stories about human interaction are really what makes this novel shine. It's less about the place than the people who live in it and the relationships that you build with them.
I enjoyed the warmth of the story and the complexity of the relationships. Given the magnitude of what Tian wants to address (including two romantic relationships, a familial estrangement, mother-daughter conflict from both Margaret and Annelie's perspectives, childhood abandonment, and sibling rivalry) it's inevitable that some stuff falls through the cracks, but the magnitude of human interaction is really the point of the novel. For while the ending is rushed and the entire subject of leaving home is a missed opportunity, the closing words are a fit conclusion, "I can allow myself to think that this place is still beautiful, even as I drive away."
Sunday, July 31, 2022
The Peach Rebellion, by Wendelin Van Draanen
Ginny's family has settled down nearby a peach farm where they once worked. Ginny, who used to play with the farmer's daughter Peggy, reunites with her old friend. But there are others less willing to form friendships. And her family has other demons to fight. Ten years ago, Ginny and her father buried her two brothers in a shallow grave because the family could afford no better. Mother never recovered from the loss and has slowly been sinking into depression ever since. Now that Ginny is finally earning money of her own at the local cannery, she has the wherewithal to do something about it. She decides that she wants to disinter her brothers and bury them properly in the local children's graveyard. The audacious plan will require help but neither Ginny nor her family are good at asking for help.
Meanwhile, Peggy has her own issues. Now seventeen, she realizes that in a few years she will have nothing. For, despite working hard on the family peach farm, the entire place is going to her brother. Girls don't inherit farms and there is no accommodation for her. Instead, she is expected to marry and settle. But that hardly seems fair when she has given so much. Peggy's best friend Lisette has a different set of issues. Her father is a banker and while she has enjoyed an easy life, she has also grown uncomfortable with the source of her wealth. To her parents' chagrin, she wants nothing to do with it and wants to disown her father.
A very strong historical novel which provides a well-researched look at post-War California and the deep societal changes that took place in the late 40s as men returned back to reclaim their jobs and unfinished business from the Depression-era reasserted itself as prosperity reigned in fits and starts. There's plenty of material on this era, but this novel makes it come alive by focusing on the people and how they thought of each other and themselves.
The story combines this sharp historical insight with three compelling protagonists -- young women who are not quite willing to accept the paths that their mothers have planned for them. Strong and resourceful, they are driven on by an unusual and poignant mission to lay Ginny's brothers to rest. While it would be easy to give Ginny, Peggy, and Lisette a contemporary spin, Van Draanen doesn't fall to the temptation. They are strong-willed but definite creatures of their time. For all of their independence, they each presume that marriage and family are their ultimate calling. They simply want to renegotiate the terms of it.
Beautifully written and compelling reading. Destined to find its way to book reports, but perhaps also to a special place on young readers' shelves.
Saturday, July 30, 2022
Out of the Fire, by Andrea Contos
At school, she befriends three other girls who have been victimized recently. One has been racially targeted by a teacher, one has an abusive step-parent, and one has an ex-boyfriend who is extorting her for sex. Finding that they share common trauma, the girls form a pact to eke out revenge against their tormentors. But while the other three girls have definite targets, Cass doesn't really know who is stalking her and the more she finds out, the scarier the truth becomes. And while revenge is easy to envisage, executing it is messy and things quickly swing bloodily and fatally out of control.
Intended to be a thriller with gravitas that comes from exploring the myriad ways that women are exploited, the execution of this blood-soaked account of revenge fell very flat for me. There is plenty of violence but little reflection and no exploration of anything. In this story's world, evil things just happen. The only response is nihilistic violence. Everyone knows it is a dead end, but what can you do? Burn it down (apparently). None of that is particularly inspiring or even interesting. Nearly constant hyperbolic statements about destruction, violence, or imminent death that quickly lose their meaning and their impact.
The writing style drove me nuts. Every other sentence is a fragment. The choppiness is intended to give the writing an edge, but its impact wears off within fifty pages. Every other one. You can only read so much of that before you go mad. Completely utterly mad. By the end I wanted to throw the book into a fire. Let it burn. Ashes to ashes. It is what it is. You get the idea.
Monday, July 25, 2022
All the Best Liars, by Amelia Kahaney
Perhaps the world does not need another sociopath/mean girl story, but this novel transcended the genre for me, going through great pains to show a chain of plausible events that gradually blew out of control. The story gains gravitas by not limiting itself to the children. For while immaturity is the spark, the fuel for this fire comes from the grownups. The girls in many cases are simply copying the vanity, classism, and greed of their elders. It's makes for grim, but compelling reading. The shocking reveal is perfectly unfolded.
Saturday, July 23, 2022
Melt With You, by Jennifer Dugan
A lesbian romance set on a food truck -- part workplace hijinks and part road story -- that relies for much of its story on the central conceit that neither Fallon or Chloe are very good at communicating. Rather, they are incredibly egocentric and inwardly focused. It's so bad, in fact, that Fallon spends the first couple of chapters defending her stubbornness to the reader in a one-way Greek Chorus. After a while though, Dugan gives up trying to justify the self-created tension of her drama queens and lets them just do their thing. The result is frustrating as it becomes painfully obvious that if Fallon and Chloe just sat down and listened to each other (rather than constantly taking offense and having meltdowns) that they could happily settle down. I just didn't care about them and I didn't like either of them.
That pretty much kills a romance story.
Saturday, July 16, 2022
Queen of the Tiles, by Hanna Alkaf
The police ruled Trina's death to be the result of natural causes, but looking around the room at all the familiar faces, Najwa wonders if someone here had something to do with it. And when Trina's Instagram account suddenly comes back to life, broadcasting anagram clues that only a Scrabble maven would appreciate, Najwa grows convinced that whoever was involved last year is planning a re-match.
A tense whodunnit that follows the standard pattern of evolving prime suspects and theories, but manages to nonetheless deliver plenty of twists and turns to keep the mystery solving fun. The Malaysian setting and the Asian characters provide unusual color and make the story more interesting. But the real winner is Najwa herself who proves a formidably capable detective in the grand tradition, ably sleuthing out the guilty party through a mastery of the world's most popular word game. The final reveal is a disappointing throwaway, but doesn't overly detract from an original story and Alkaf's stirring love letter to competitive Scrabble.
Tuesday, July 12, 2022
Seed, by Caryl Lewis
A whimsical middle grade fantasy that combines realistic issues (e.g., mental illness, disability, and neglect) with granddad's truly fantastical ideas. And while the latter events of the story are highly improbable, the story's message of going after your dreams and taking a positive view of life is sweet.
Sunday, July 10, 2022
The Best Liars in Riverview, by Lin Thompson
And so, it doesn't really surprise Aubrey when she learns that Joel has gone missing. She may even know where he is, but she doesn't really want to give away the secret. When the grownups start asking her what she knows about his disappearance or where he might be, she lies. She feels guilty about doing so, but she realizes that really everyone is lying is one way or another. Her lies may not ever be the biggest ones. That knowledge also convinces here that she needs to be the one to find him.
The story of Aubrey's search for Joel (with the help of a mutual friend Mari and Aubrey's older sister Teagan, heavy with remembrances and flashbacks, is more of a means to quest for identity -- a search that Aubrey is not really truly aware that she is on until the end. The reveal is drawn out, but natural and organic to the characters. We never are really told what they are and how they feel, but more allowed to travel with them as they discover things for themselves. We're left with a sense of evolving emotions. We can see where the two of them are now and how they got this far, but not really who they will be yet. That, in itself, feels particularly appropriate for a middle reader.
Thursday, July 07, 2022
Rising Above Shepherdsville, by Ann Schoenbohm
A gentle period piece set in 1977 (although the story itself is timeless) which is beautifully written, but not very adventuresome. This is the sort of uncontroversial children's book that used to be more common. The basic coming-of-age tale in which Dulcie comes to terms with the loss of her mother, learns some life lessons about honesty and kindness, and has some nice interactions with the three adults in her life. There's nothing particularly wrong with this book, but it isn't really anything new (and books like Because of Winn Dixie have probably done it better).
Monday, July 04, 2022
Hopepunk, by Preston Norton
It seems that the family would just muddle through in dysfunction but then things are shook up when Hope's crush at school, a boy named Danny, comes out as gay and is thrown out of the house by his family. In an act of atonement, Hope's family takes him in and an angry dynamic develops between Hope and Danny's twin brother Dylan. Dylan is a nasty homophobe and forms a hate band called Alt-Rite, who write songs attacking Hope and her friends. In response, Hope forms her own a band, a group of hopeless misfits called Hope Cassidy and the Sundance Kids, who challenge Alt-Rite in their school's Battle of the Bands. A lesbian science-fiction story runs in parallel through alternate chapters and an internet influencer plays a prominent role as well in this mixture of social commentary and satire.
Norton is a good writer and I was quickly drawn in to the family tragedy that unfolds at the beginning. I didn't initially get (and never really warmed to) the science fiction story, but I loved the depth of the characters. The three sisters and their parents each had distinct personalities and roles to play. Even Danny's outing and the way the family reunited over sheltering him presaged a fascinating look at the conflict between religious intolerance and charity. But Norton has grander intentions for the story and that's when things really started running off the rails. From the blatant hate speech to the official tolerance of bullying to the eventual official maleficence, I found myself being pushed towards accepting greater and greater levels of implausibility. The conclusion is so utterly over the top that I just tuned the mess out. In the end, it seemed a shame to take what was a really nice character study and fully-formed family tragedy and turn it into something absurd and over-the-top, especially with a subject as important as homophobia and the normalization of hatred. Profoundly disappointing.
Sunday, July 03, 2022
Candidly Cline, by Kathryn Ormsbee
In comparison to the rest of her problems, this is small change. Her grandmother has been diagnosed with Alzheimer's and Cline is struggling to understand Gram's unpredictable health and behavior. Cline also is grappling with her sexuality and why she likes girls more than boys Also with the experience of being betrayed by her best friend when she confesses as much to her in confidence.
But for every bad surprise, there's a good one as well. Through good planning, fortuitous moments, and a few karmic moments, Cline discovers that it takes a small kindnesses and a village to fulfill a dream. And that when it comes to big dreams, there are more people who want you to succeed than to tear you down.
I was slightly afraid that the book might end up tying off every problem with a cheery bow, but that's not really what happens. While Cline benefits from some pretty good luck, there's plenty of things that don't work out, but for all those Cline comes to peace with the outcome. She makes plenty of errors in judgment (most egregiously the decision to go behind her mother's back), but she's courageous and dedicated. Most importantly, the story shows Cline dealing with a wide variety of people of all ages, both sympathetic and not, and learning to navigate difficult social interactions with maturity.
In the end, this is a warm and positive story about working hard, taking responsibility, and owning your outcomes. Good life lessons.
Saturday, July 02, 2022
Today Tonight Tomorrow, by Rachel Lynn Solomon
But even when that ultimate is dispensed, their competition still remains fierce. Their high school has an annual tradition -- the senior Howl, an assassination-themed scavenger hunt. The seniors are given a list of fifteen items to find and the name of another senior for them to "kill" (by stealing the armband that each of them must wear). The goal is to find the fifteen items first and avoid getting killed by an opponent. Rowan intends to annihilate Neil and end her high school career on a victory. But instead, Rowan and Neil find themselves teaming up. At first, they are reluctant, but gradually they grow close enough that by the end their relationship becomes more important than the game.
I loved all the city details, with its combination of well-known and obscure spots that made up the scavenger hunt (this is definitely a much more fun story if you know Seattle!). I was less taken by the story which seem drawn out and meandering. For kids that are supposed to be such over achievers, they seemed awfully unfocussed and were far too easily distracted. I would have had a better time with the story if they had just aced the hunt and then turned to focusing on their relationship -- that would feel more in character.
There's an interesting digression about Rowan and Neil's experiences as the only Jews in their school and a bonding that occurs in sharing their recollections of the microaggressions they have experienced. It serves as one of the things that brings them together and it becomes character-defining, but it's introduced awfully late and abruptly (on page 119, in a strange scene where a classmate makes an anti-Semitic remark). Somehow, we're supposed to accept that Rowan's Jewish identity is definitive, despite the fact that she doesn't mention a word about it for the first third of the book.
Sunday, June 26, 2022
Forward March, by Skye Quinlan
Margot has been corresponding (explicitly) on Tinder with someone purporting to be Hunter. The great mystery is who and why? And while that person is definitely not Hunter, Hunter is surprised to find that she soon wishes it had been. For while not entirely sure how she feels, Hunter has to admit that Margot is kind of cute and she does sort of/maybe likes girls. Not, of course, that she could ever let that become public because of what it would do to her father's political career and to her mother. However, when someone lets the secret out, Hunter has to make some decisions about who she is trying to please and whose life she is really living.
While purporting to be a marching band story, I honestly found that part of the story weak and distracting. The story is really about finding out who your true friends are. They certainly are not the ones Hunter has collected around her. By the end, pretty much every friend Hunter had at the beginning of the story turns out to be toxic and she's ended up with a complete new set of friends. That's just one of the many turn-offs of this novel. Hunter is a weak character who largely lets people walk over her and I really didn't care that much in the end what happened to her. And the things that happened didn't seem to matter either: (as already mentioned) the marching band setting was largely inconsequential, the political stuff likewise, the parents were not worth reconciling with, the friends were repulsive, and Hunter's self-realization never really materialized.
Saturday, June 25, 2022
Lawless Spaces, by Corey Ann Haydu
Her mother knows all about those double standards. She's in the midst of the backlash from her own decision to come out and accuse a public figure of having hurt her when she was sixteen. Under that pressure, Mom shuts Mimi off and abandons her, just as Mimi is enduring her own version of the same events.
Mimi, left alone on her own sixteenth birthday, digs through old dusty journals she finds in the attic. They turn out to have belonged to her mother, grandmother, and great-grandmother -- generations of women, who at sixteen faced the same experiences, the same painful double-standards, and the same consequences. While powerless to change their circumstances, each young woman (within the "lawless spaces" of their private diaries) poured out the truth. Taking in the fact that the more things change, the more they stay the same, Mimi becomes determined to break the curse that has afflicted the women in her family (or perhaps all women?).
Reading a story of intergenerational sexual abuse (including an unwanted pregnancy and forced adoption) is perhaps not the most cheery piece of literature to be reading on the day that the Supreme Court overrode Roe v Wade, but it may in fact be appropriate. As I am today making the mistake of reading people's Facebook feeds (and the comment streams in particular), I am reminded of the terrible tendency of human beings to oversimplify and choose witty snarks over complicated truth This book reminded me that the world is not nearly as simply as we try to convince ourselves it is.
I went through distinct waves of emotion while reading the book. At first, with its litanies of the wrong men do to women, I wondered what new ground could possibly be covered here. Did we really need another story of girls being taken advantage of and having their lives destroyed? As the sheer cruelty of Mimi's mother was revealed (and excused in the name of everything Mom was dealing with), I began to wonder if the author would ever connect the dots between the family's unhealthy psychology and its perpetual victimhood. In developing that feeling, I wrestled with the guilt that I was blaming the victims. I struggled with trying to explain why it was all so much more complicated. I was already thinking about how to explain in this review that the women were not to blame for their being assaulted but were for their lack of compassion. Then the author beat me to it and went so much farther than I had thought to. By the last stanza, I was blown away by the beautiful and devastating way that Haydu captured the complex interactions of misogyny that make women their best friends and worst enemies simultaneously. No matter that very little of the story is tied up at the end. Instead, the book concludes with an understanding that acceptance does not necessarily come from neat ribbons and bows, and that that's OK.
Told in verse, this 490 page book is mostly white pages and a lightning fast read. Poetry is useful in this case because it allow Haydu to leave things unsaid and unresolved. It permits things to be implied and felt without having to actually spell them out. Verse also has its weaknesses. Within the poetry, all of the characters sound the same. With voices from six different generations of women, there should have been nuances and differences in tone. But while they had different values, they all sounded alike.
Wednesday, June 22, 2022
Aetherbound, by E. K. Johnston
Pendt, judged to be a waste of food and oxygen, is kept alive until her eighteenth birthday so she can then be sold off. But just a few weeks before the sale, the ship makes a rare docking and Pendt takes the opportunity to run. Doing so, she finds a new life, with a loving new family, but there are unintended consequences. Her birth family returns with demands that threaten not only Pendt, but the entire universe as well.
While there is some fantastic universe building in this tale, the storytelling is rough and the pacing uneven. Given the setting's complexity, the story is initially buried in historical background which, while interesting, bogs down the pace. To make up for that slow start, we jump forward through events quickly, which allows only the sketchiest of development. This leaves the general feeling of an unfinished story. Aside from Pendt herself, just about everyone is an unfinished portrayal, motivations are largely declared with little demonstration, and the climax, while based on all that backstory, comes up quite abruptly and feels rushed. It's not a question of length -- given the book's short length (241 pages), this easily could have been filled out. It's more an issue of manuscript not ready to publish.
Sunday, June 19, 2022
Hani and Ishu's Guide to Fake Dating, by Adiba Jaigirdar
Ishu has bigger problems. Her older sister is dropping out of school to get married and her parents are scandalized. To distract them, Ishu wants to get elected Head Girl at school. But only popular girls get elected and Ishu's never considered making friends to be priority. However, when Hani comes to her with an unusual request and needs a big favor, Ishu sees an opportunity. A deal is hatched: Ishu will pretend to be Hani's girlfriend and, in exchange, Hani will help ingratiate Ishu into her social circles and build up some social capital so that Ishu can win the election.
In true rom-com fashion, this rather tortured premise blooms in unexpected ways and in the end Hani and Ishu find that their relationship may be more real than either intended. The result is a sweet and funny LGBT story of high school romance between two Irish-Bengali girls (checking off quite a few diversity checkboxes in the process). I loved the ethnic flavoring and the attention to the family life that plays such a big role in Ishu and Hani's lives. I also enjoyed reading an Irish YA story for the chance to visit a slightly different milieu. Good characters (with realistic flaws and insecurities to offset their strengths) and excellent pacing make this an enjoyable read.
Friday, June 17, 2022
Between the Lighthouse and You, by Michelle Lee
Now Alice wants to return to the islands and interview the family that runs the lighthouse to see if she could somehow receive messages from her Mom. While her family is unsupportive, her father does in the end agree to go down to the islands for a visit.
Leo is just the eldest son in the crazy large family that lives at the lighthouse, but he bears a heavy responsibility. While the whole family claims to love the Tidings, Leo feels like he's the only one who appreciates their true meaning. When he receives a special message on a cassette tape from his dead grandfather, addressed only to him, he must find a way to listen to it (this involves a bit of an adventure in finding a player). When he eventually gets to listen to the message, he is surprised to find it is addressed not only to him but to Alice's family as well.
With subtle and unobtrusive magic elements, this middle grade novel is really about grief and recovery. Both protagonists are learning how to adapt to a world where their beloved family member is gone. In doing so, they find their relationships changing with the adults and siblings around them. I found the siblings overly obnoxious, but portraying them as such allows for a clearer lesson that one must love the family one has in order to honor the memory of those who are no longer with us.
Wednesday, June 15, 2022
The Memory of Cotton, by Ann K. Howley
One day, going through one of her grandmother's boxes with Darrin, they discover a Ku Klux Klan robe. When they ask grandma about it, she is initially reluctant to explain, but a short while later, she changes her mind. She announces that she'll explain everything but she needs to revisit her hometown in North Carolina and she needs Shelby and Darrin to drive here there. Shelby has never been there. The homecoming goes on to uncover several family secrets and along the way explore the foundations of discrimination and hatred.
A mixed bag. I found the characters interesting and the story compelling but I had a hard time getting into the story. The storytelling is sketchy and needed to be fleshed out. The overall theme of where hatred comes from is powerful, but the pieces of it (the contemporary town bully, the KKK membership, a murder, and even familial rejection) are left lying about. Distractedly, Shelby's reconciliation with her brother's death sort of hangs as an outside theme, never quite adhering to the rest of the story. Seen as an early draft, this is a knock-out story, but it really felt unfinished.
[Disclosure: I received a free copy of the book from the publisher in exchange for an unbiased opinion.]
Sunday, June 12, 2022
Extasia, by Claire Legrand
But as proud as Amity is in this perverse honor, she is aware that there are forces on the outside that are bringing change to Haven, whether its people embrace them or not. A coven of witches are encircling the town and plotting the downfall of its patriarchal regime. Men are being murdered.
Amity is stuck between two warring camps. Through magic that she is just beginning to understand, she stands as a catalyst of change for her world. While Amity longs for an end to the suffering of her sisters, she also wants to protect her community and she is torn between those two desires.
A brutal and horrific setting featuring systematic physical and sexual abuse of young women. While not particularly explicit, this is a gory tale full of unpleasantries including child abuse, rape, and even a brief episode of cannibalism. This is plenty of blood!
Legrand is shooting for a grand statement about overcoming institutional misogyny through empowerment and reconciliation, but it never quite comes together. The problem is that the book is so good at showing the cruelties and atrocities, that there is little space for forgiveness. It is hard to not agree with Vengeance (one of the witches with whom Amity allies) who would just as soon kill every man and every female ally who aided them. Amity (or Rage, the name to which she changes her name mid-novel is not a convincing leader for a kumbaya moment. The story, while excellent at wallowing in horrors, never really grapples with what drives misogynistic impulses and so the story lacks the depth to reach for solutions. It works for a horror/fantasy novel, but lacks gravitas.