In the midst of a powerful winter storm in northern Maine, Willow, her brother Wisp, and her mother crash their car. They are rescued by a plow driver who takes them to the small town of Kismet. Stuck in town for a few days because of the storm, they have time to get to know the inhabitants and become aware that something a little fishy is going on. The people of Kismet have an uncanny ability to anticipate things (like knowing what you want to order for dinner before you do so). They also seem to be hiding a secret.
None of which seems to both Willow's mother. Always a bit obsessed with monitoring the health of sickly child Wisp, she becomes convinced that living in Kismet may be the solution to his health issues. For Willow, who has had to endure a fair amount of sacrifices for her brother's care, this is a final straw: She wants to go home and leave this place forever!
An entertaining fantasy novel, which poses questions about fate versus free will in terms that younger readers will understand. Willow is observant, brave, and assertive, yet also kind and respectful (all traits that parents will appreciate in a book). An age-appropriate romance with a local boy adds some fun and is nicely integrated into the tale. The result is an easy reading and fun story.
Tuesday, December 31, 2019
Thursday, December 26, 2019
Emma-Jean Lazarus Fell Out of a Tree, by Lauren Tarshis
Emma-Jean is really book smart, but she doesn't really understand her classmates. With the odd way she talks and the way her mind flits around, they don't get her either. Up to now, they've given each other a wide berth, but that changes in a fateful bathroom encounter between Emma-Jean and Colleen. Colleen's having trouble with another girl in their class and Emma-Jean realizes she can help! However, the help that Emma-Jean comes up with end up making everything even more complicated. To fix the mess (which literally ends up with Emma-Jean falling out of a tree!), both girls will have to expand out of their comfort zones.
A sweet middle reader about building friendships, communicating with others, and the importance of kindness. The general positivity of the story is a welcome anecdote to mean girl stories. I enjoyed having a break from the doom and gloom of the other books I've been reading lately.
Emma-Jean is a fascinating character. Somewhere on the Autism Spectrum (as apparently her late father was as well), she forms an interesting and sympathetic narrator as she tries to understand the people around her. But Tarshis, while occasionally exploiting Emma-Jean's misconceptions for humor, never lets the story exploit her heroine, who in the end proves to be more insightful than any of us imagine.
A sweet middle reader about building friendships, communicating with others, and the importance of kindness. The general positivity of the story is a welcome anecdote to mean girl stories. I enjoyed having a break from the doom and gloom of the other books I've been reading lately.
Emma-Jean is a fascinating character. Somewhere on the Autism Spectrum (as apparently her late father was as well), she forms an interesting and sympathetic narrator as she tries to understand the people around her. But Tarshis, while occasionally exploiting Emma-Jean's misconceptions for humor, never lets the story exploit her heroine, who in the end proves to be more insightful than any of us imagine.
Tuesday, December 24, 2019
Lie to Me, by Kaitlin Ward
Amelia is lucky to have survived her fall into the river. All of which has folks shaking their heads and wondering why she was fooling around on the wrong side of the guardrail in the first place (although some folks think it was suicide). Amelia also wonders what happened. She's never been clumsy and the whole thing seems off. While she can't remember much of the incident, due to the concussion she endured, she has a faint memory of being pushed.
It is easy to discount those notions until another girl is found in the same river (allegedly from jumping in as well). Who would be doing this? Who wants her dead and these other girls dead and why? Amelia takes a hard look around her: at her friends, her boyfriend, the creepy neighbor across the street, but nothing comes together. As the body count grows, Amelia no longer knows who is safe and who is not.
Average mystery that has fine delivery, but suffers from a bloated story. It feels like a short story that the author enlarged to novel length with trivial activities -- shopping trips, general socializing, school activities, and so on -- none of which really feed into the plot. Of course, given the genre, some of it is there to mislead the reader, but a lot feels unnecessary. As I read it, I found myself willing the filler to end so I could get back to the real story.
(Disclaimer: I received an ARC from the publisher in exchange for an unbiased and independent review. The book is scheduled for release on January 7th.)
It is easy to discount those notions until another girl is found in the same river (allegedly from jumping in as well). Who would be doing this? Who wants her dead and these other girls dead and why? Amelia takes a hard look around her: at her friends, her boyfriend, the creepy neighbor across the street, but nothing comes together. As the body count grows, Amelia no longer knows who is safe and who is not.
Average mystery that has fine delivery, but suffers from a bloated story. It feels like a short story that the author enlarged to novel length with trivial activities -- shopping trips, general socializing, school activities, and so on -- none of which really feed into the plot. Of course, given the genre, some of it is there to mislead the reader, but a lot feels unnecessary. As I read it, I found myself willing the filler to end so I could get back to the real story.
(Disclaimer: I received an ARC from the publisher in exchange for an unbiased and independent review. The book is scheduled for release on January 7th.)
Saturday, December 21, 2019
The Black Coats, by Colleen Oakes
It's been months since Natalie was murdered and her suspected murderer set free for lack of evidence. The world has moved on, but her cousin Thea can't. Lost in grief, she barely functions.
Then one day she receives a mysterious letter. Intrigued, she follows its instructions and finds herself at an old house. There, she learns that she has been invited to join the Black Coats.
Founded by a woman who was raped and couldn't get her assailant punished, the Black Coats are a secret organization of young women who engage in "balancings" (vigilante justice against the accused). Recruiting only from victims or friends of victims, the young women in the group are personally driven to the cause of punishing men who escape justice because the victims were women. Thea finds herself training in martial arts and covert ops with four other girls, learning the ropes and engaging in their own balancings.
Participation gives her confidence and Thea starts to bloom again at home and school, even sparking a romance. But as the girls get more involved in the organization, Thea begins to have doubts about the "justice" that they are dispensing. These doubts grow larger when the organization reveals its darker side.
While the premise raises eyebrows and the morality of vigilante justice was giving me doubts about this book early, it all begins in humor and fun. Certainly the idea of young women gaining confidence and breaking free of debilitating grief is an empowering idea. And, at least at first, a great deal of stress is placed on the idea that murder is out of the picture. I felt sympathy for and interest in the characters and didn't stress over the violence. Slipping a serial rapist a roofie actually seemed quite poetic to me.
As things turn dark and those earlier promises are tossed aside (and the body count starts to grow), the empowering themes are largely lost. The book itself loses its way, forgoing the empowerment for psychopathy. Oakes says in her notes that this book rose from the ashes of another about a girl recovering from grief. That seems a shame as a more serious book would have been more meaningful. By the last fifty pages of this one, as the violence grows and becomes largely girl-on-girl, I pretty much lost interest in this story.
Then one day she receives a mysterious letter. Intrigued, she follows its instructions and finds herself at an old house. There, she learns that she has been invited to join the Black Coats.
Founded by a woman who was raped and couldn't get her assailant punished, the Black Coats are a secret organization of young women who engage in "balancings" (vigilante justice against the accused). Recruiting only from victims or friends of victims, the young women in the group are personally driven to the cause of punishing men who escape justice because the victims were women. Thea finds herself training in martial arts and covert ops with four other girls, learning the ropes and engaging in their own balancings.
Participation gives her confidence and Thea starts to bloom again at home and school, even sparking a romance. But as the girls get more involved in the organization, Thea begins to have doubts about the "justice" that they are dispensing. These doubts grow larger when the organization reveals its darker side.
While the premise raises eyebrows and the morality of vigilante justice was giving me doubts about this book early, it all begins in humor and fun. Certainly the idea of young women gaining confidence and breaking free of debilitating grief is an empowering idea. And, at least at first, a great deal of stress is placed on the idea that murder is out of the picture. I felt sympathy for and interest in the characters and didn't stress over the violence. Slipping a serial rapist a roofie actually seemed quite poetic to me.
As things turn dark and those earlier promises are tossed aside (and the body count starts to grow), the empowering themes are largely lost. The book itself loses its way, forgoing the empowerment for psychopathy. Oakes says in her notes that this book rose from the ashes of another about a girl recovering from grief. That seems a shame as a more serious book would have been more meaningful. By the last fifty pages of this one, as the violence grows and becomes largely girl-on-girl, I pretty much lost interest in this story.
Friday, December 20, 2019
We Set the Dark on Fire, by Tehlor Kay Mejia
Trained to be observant and quick thinking at the Medio School for Girls to become a primera (trusted companion, confident,
and first wife) Dani is cautious and
rational. Top of her class, she is the
opposite of Carmen, the top-ranked segunda. Segundas, in contrast, are trained to be beautiful and sensual. Every powerful man of Medio has two wives (a primera and a segunda). It is an irony that these two
schoolyard enemies end up married off to the same man – a boy who is slated to
lead the interior ministry and aims to some day become president.
In the midst of all of this is La Voz who
seek to call attention to the inequality and injustice in society, and raise a rebellion against it. La Voz is everywhere and while Dani’s husband
is committed to crushing them, Dani has been recruited by them to spy on his husband and the family. She does so at first because of
blackmail, but eventually she develops sympathy for their cause and the
backbone to support it.
Part one of a projected duology, this wonderfully
Hispanic-flavored dystopian combines some great character development with a power struggle complex enough to rival any telenovela. Things get really weird at the end, but it
wraps up with a perfect lead-in to the
sequel (not a cliffhanger, but rather a ramping up of the story that makes what comes
next look interesting).
Girls on the Verge, by Sharon Biggs Waller
When Camille finds out that she is pregnant, she’s pretty
certain from the start that she wants to terminate her pregnancy. However, getting an abortion as a
seventeen-year-old in Texas in 2014 is no easy matter. She struggles with doctors and judges,
traveling across the state, across the border to Mexico, and finally on an epic road trip to New Mexico. This adventure creates a quirky road story. Accompanied by her best
friend Bea (who supports her but feels conflicted by her own pro-life beliefs) and Annabelle (who feels driven to help Camille figure this whole thing out for reasons of her own), the three young women find that nothing about America's culture wars is simple.
The story itself is really a bare-bones skeleton on which Waller layers a
variety of legal facts and anecdotes in order to show how the politics of
abortion has turned the experience of seeking one into a surreal and hellish landscape. Given my beliefs, I have no personal issue with the author’s ideology and I even see the value in opening some eyes
about how much politics has subverted things, but this is not a book that is going to be read through to the end by
anyone with doubts about a woman’s fundamental right to choose. And that raises a question about its utility.
As a story, there is not a lot here. The girls have interesting differences and
there is some perfunctory effort to allow them to grow a little during the
story. Some drama occurs with various
challenges they experience (harassment, violence, and a brush or two with the
Law). But aside from the three girls, the other characters are
stereotypes and lack substance. Overall, the
book comes across as a screed…to an audience who is already converted.
Friday, December 13, 2019
Birthday, by Meredith Russo
Eric and Morgan are best friends and share the same
birthday. With the exception of the year
they got sick, the two of them have always spent their birthdays together. Back when they were little and
didn’t know better, they would tell each other that they loved each other. They swore they would be best friends for life.
But things change as the boys get older: Morgan’s mother dies of cancer, Eric’s
parents are getting divorced, and the idea of love between the boys has
evolved. Eric knows he isn’t gay, but
he’s always felt that Morgan was more girl-like, in a way that he found attractive.
Sure, Morgan is a guy (they play football together!) but somehow Morgan
has always seemed pretty. And Morgan who actually does find boys attractive, doesn't feel particularly gay either. Instead, the body parts just feel
wrong. Morgan feels like a girl – a girl
very much in love with her best friend.
Told over a period of six birthdays, the novel explores the
development of Morgan’s gender identity and the love story between her and
Eric. Tracing key events and tracking all the emotional stages from exploration to self-loathing and depression to eventual acceptance, we get both Morgan's search to find peace as a trans girl and Eric's understanding of his romantic feelings for Morgan (i.e., being straight and romantically attracted).
It's a moving and informative work about a life journey for both Morgan and Eric that will be meaningful for trans teens and those who love them. In many
ways this is a similar story to Russo's debut novel, If I Was Your Girl. But while the dead mother angle is tired cliche and exploitative, I find this sophomore effort more effective than her first book. For one thing, being seemingly autobiographical, its more personal. It's certainly better written and reads quickly.
You Asked for Perfect, by Laura Silverman
Ariel has managed to maintain a straight-A all-AP-courses workload almost all of the way through high school.
But in his final year, there just no longer seems to be enough time to
fit it all in. Even with tutoring from
his friend (and potential boyfriend) Amir, it seems that as soon as he fixes
one problem, another one pops up. Trying
to do everything and do it all perfectly is simply too much but he's so invested in being perfect that he doesn't feel he can stop trying. Eventually, it all comes to a head, but in
the end it takes a family tragedy to reset Ariel’s priorities. These are immediately tested as he has to
choose between his dreams and his friends.
The book has two notable elements: the casual approach it takes to Ariel’s
bisexuality and the strong role that religion (Judiaism, in this case) plays in
Ariel’s life. For readers used to
sexuality being the focus of a book, the non-issue of Ariel’s sexuality is ironically
notable for not being noted Have we really normalized to
that point or is Silverman making a point by playing it up? As for the prominent role of faith, while Judaism is no
foreigner to YA, the positive role of religion is a stand out and welcome.
The story however is pedestrian. Ariel’s overworking and stressful lifestyle
is blatant. His eventual burnout is no
surprise and the solution too straightforward. The heavy handling of the topic would be
more appropriate for a middle reader but seems preachy for a teen audience.
Friday, November 29, 2019
You Must Not Miss, by Katrina Leno
Magpie has a lonely life. Her alcoholic mother is frequently away.
Her sister, frustrated with taking care of Mom, moved out and refuses to come back home. Magpie's circle of friends has been reduced to Ben
and Clare and Magpie's social capital is spent. As soon as she turns
eighteen, she plans to move out of the town of Farther.
But before that move happens, something strange and wonderful occurs. As an escape, Magpie has been creating an imaginary world in her notebook. It’s a perfect world with friends who like
her, mothers who don’t drink, and everything is great. She calls the world "Near." Fantasy is one thing, but one day she discovers that she can actually visit Near through the woodshed in the backyard and it is every bit as perfect as she imagined in her notebook.
But as her fantasy world of Near becomes more and more real,
Magpie finds it has a dark side, which can be used not only for escape but also
for revenge. With all the anger that Magpie carries with her, the temptation of such power is too much. Despite numerous warnings that the costs of using Near to inflict suffering on her enemies is dangerous, she becomes obsessed with striking back at her tormentors.
Thus, what starts
as Secret Garden becomes Carrie in this strange and blood-thirsty
tale of revenge. I wasn’t sure in the
end what the point of it all was.
Magpie, consumed by her anger and frustration achieves some sort of peace
in the end, but it doesn’t really have a huge impact. Her bloodthirstiness and cruelty pretty much shuts down
anything sympathetic about her. I didn’t
like her and found her cruel and ultimately pathetic. That even she judges herself that way in the end was little comfort from this dark piece.
Better Than the Best Plan, by Lauren Morrill
Maritzi’s mother has always had a flighty streak to
her. So when she leaves a note saying
that she’s going away for six to twelve months to learn how to be a meditation
and life skills coach and that seventeen year-old Maritzi should just “follow
her own path,” it isn’t too surprising.
It’s going to be hard to get by, given that Maritzi isn’t exactly
earning much money from her part-time job, but she’s always managed to keep
things together anyway. How much harder can it
be without her Mom around?
But before Maritzi has much of an opportunity to find out, a tipped-off social worker comes and takes Maritzi into
a foster home. Kris and Ryan, her foster parents, turn out to have a
history with Maritzi that she didn’t even know existed. As Maritzi settles in, they all find that
there is a lot to this than they ever imagined. Lightening things up a bit, a little light romance with the boy next door also makes an appearance.
The highlight of the book is definitely the character of Maritzi herself. She not only says that she could have taken care of herself, but she could also have had a decent job of pulling it off. She's a particular responsible and capable young woman, yet sufficiently flawed to be believable. It’s nice to have a story where the heroine
goes to a party and doesn’t drink at all.
And while her foster mother is pretty hard on her (for entirely believably flawed reasons of her own), Maritzi probably doesn't deserve it.
But sadly the story sort of goes nowhere. The romance is underdeveloped, the
eventual inevitable show down with Mom fizzles away, and the question of whether Maritzi will live with her mother or her foster parents becomes a non-event. It all wraps up neatly and there is not much
drama to it.
The Grace Year, by Kim Ligget
In the County, men hold all of the power. But when a girl turns sixteen, she enters the "Grace Year" and is
consumed by forces so powerful that she threatens the entire
community. To protect the rest, all sixteen year-old
girls are sent away to live (or die) on an isolated island for a year. Surrounded by “poachers” who will skin them
alive if they try to escape because the flesh and blood of the girls is highly desired (and illicitly bought) by men who crave the magic that it allegedly
possesses. Those young women who survive and return
will be married off or sent out to a life of labor or prostitution.
Tierney has always been her father’s daughter, willful and
rebellious, and it’s gotten her into a fair share of trouble. But it has also given her the strength and
resourcefulness to survive the ordeal. Yet she will find that the physical harshness of exile is not the greatest
challenge. Far more dangerous than the
poachers and the wilds that surround them are the
girls themselves. Petty jealousies between the girls (over who will marry at the end of the year and who will be sent into labor) face
them off each other and put everyone in danger.
Part Handmaid’s Tale and
part Lord of the Flies, this dark and
brutal dystopia explores society's fetishization of feminine adolescence. The treatment is gory and bloody
and thoroughly unpleasant. Tierney is one of the tougher heroines you’ll ever meet, but she also a powerful leader and her aforementioned resourcefulness and intelligence serves her well. In telling her story, Ligget pulls no punches and the storytelling makes no attempt at subtlety. The book is vivid. It’s apparently been optioned for a movie, although one imagines that the gruesome nature of the book will need to be toned down if the target adolescent audience is going to be able to access it.
What makes the novel so interesting to me are the arguments it makes about society's treatment of sexuality and sexual inequality. This is not just a criticism of patriarchy (as people so often misread Margaret Atwood's classic). Ligget’s point that women
weaken themselves by being their own worst enemies is powerful and
controversial stuff. It fleshes out the
usual anti-patriarchal dystopian by showing in Foucaldian terms the way the
prisoners aid the jailers, the way that girls' gazes on each other are every bit as violent as men's. The novel’s non-traditional
ending, with its rejection of traditional literary forms is both its own
rebellion against patriarchy and strikingly original. Formidable and provocative.
Wednesday, November 27, 2019
This Time Will Be Different, by Misa Sugiura
The Heart's Desire flower shop has been a key part of the Katsuyama's family for years. It carries with it a bitter legacy. When CJ's grandfather was relocated to an internment camp during WWII, the family was forced to sell the property for next-to-nothing to the McAllisters. After they came back, the McAllisters demanded a huge sum to reclaim it. Others would have walked away, but for decades they worked and saved until they could buy back the property. Katsuyamas never quit.
For CJ's grandfather and aunt, the McAllisters could never be forgiven, but CJ's mother is more pragmatic. She shunned the family business and went into finance, ironically joining the McAllister venture capital firm, a move that threatened to split the family.
Flash forward seventeen years and now the business is not doing well. CJ's mother has negotiated a deal to sell the property back to the McAllisters. CJ's aunt Hannah objects on principle and CJ herself sides with her aunt. The conflict reopens the old wounds, but there is no denying that the flower shop is losing money. And while Hannah and CJ sentimentally hold fast, Mom's relentless realism is winning out.
The issue broadens when the local newspaper uncovers that old man McAllister pulled the same property trick on literally hundreds of Japanese Americans -- using racist rhetoric as a smokescreen to enrich himself by swindling them. The money he raised in the process become the foundation for the McAllisters fortune and was used to buy the family prestige. One of the most damning legacies of this is the fact that CJ's high school is named after the man. Inspired by the story and driven by her personal vendetta, CJ organizes a student movement to get the school renamed, an act that threatens her Mom's career plans.
Intertwined with this is CJ's conflict with a publicity-seeking white girl named Brynn, Brynn's complicated relationship with CJ's best friend Emily, CJ's own romantic issues, and CJ's struggle to win her mother's respect. Teen pregnancy and whether to raise the baby or have an abortion figure in prominently as well. So, it's obviously a rather complex story to summarize
Despite the multitude of stories being told, the novel is surprisingly fluid and readable. For the most part the various subplots fit in to the main story (although the teen pregnancy subplot is ultimately peripheral and probably could have been cut). Sugiura has previously shown an affinity to writing about Japanese Internment and has found a creative way here to bring contemporary relevance to the topic. The character of Brynn gives her the opportunity to discuss White Privilege effectively, albeit the issue seemed too blithely resolved.
Where Sugiura struggles is in depicting conflict and conflicting views. In general, all of the conflicts in this book are resolved the same way -- characters spar and then meet up later, literally say "I fucked up," and then move on. There's not much debate or grayness allowed (presumably because Sugiura doesn't see any). It's thus a bit of a rude surprise that the ending is so bittersweet and unresolved. In this novel the characters can all agree to live together, but the outside world is still unfair -- there's no map to resolution and Sugiura apparently can't imagine one. That's ultimately unsatisfying.
For CJ's grandfather and aunt, the McAllisters could never be forgiven, but CJ's mother is more pragmatic. She shunned the family business and went into finance, ironically joining the McAllister venture capital firm, a move that threatened to split the family.
Flash forward seventeen years and now the business is not doing well. CJ's mother has negotiated a deal to sell the property back to the McAllisters. CJ's aunt Hannah objects on principle and CJ herself sides with her aunt. The conflict reopens the old wounds, but there is no denying that the flower shop is losing money. And while Hannah and CJ sentimentally hold fast, Mom's relentless realism is winning out.
The issue broadens when the local newspaper uncovers that old man McAllister pulled the same property trick on literally hundreds of Japanese Americans -- using racist rhetoric as a smokescreen to enrich himself by swindling them. The money he raised in the process become the foundation for the McAllisters fortune and was used to buy the family prestige. One of the most damning legacies of this is the fact that CJ's high school is named after the man. Inspired by the story and driven by her personal vendetta, CJ organizes a student movement to get the school renamed, an act that threatens her Mom's career plans.
Intertwined with this is CJ's conflict with a publicity-seeking white girl named Brynn, Brynn's complicated relationship with CJ's best friend Emily, CJ's own romantic issues, and CJ's struggle to win her mother's respect. Teen pregnancy and whether to raise the baby or have an abortion figure in prominently as well. So, it's obviously a rather complex story to summarize
Despite the multitude of stories being told, the novel is surprisingly fluid and readable. For the most part the various subplots fit in to the main story (although the teen pregnancy subplot is ultimately peripheral and probably could have been cut). Sugiura has previously shown an affinity to writing about Japanese Internment and has found a creative way here to bring contemporary relevance to the topic. The character of Brynn gives her the opportunity to discuss White Privilege effectively, albeit the issue seemed too blithely resolved.
Where Sugiura struggles is in depicting conflict and conflicting views. In general, all of the conflicts in this book are resolved the same way -- characters spar and then meet up later, literally say "I fucked up," and then move on. There's not much debate or grayness allowed (presumably because Sugiura doesn't see any). It's thus a bit of a rude surprise that the ending is so bittersweet and unresolved. In this novel the characters can all agree to live together, but the outside world is still unfair -- there's no map to resolution and Sugiura apparently can't imagine one. That's ultimately unsatisfying.
I Wish You All the Best, by Mason Deaver
Ben decides that it is time to come clean with their parents and tell them that they are non-binary (and uses the pronoun "they"). It doesn't go well and Ben's parents literally kick them out on the streets. With few options available, Ben reaches out to Hannah, their sister (who has herself been long estranged from their family) and she takes them in.
With Hannah's help and a relocation, Ben is able to finish school and have some space to reconsider what they want. Part of that search is a burgeoning relationship with best friend Nathan. But being in a romance is challenging to Ben, who doesn't necessary understand how to articulate love and sexual attraction as non-binary. From their family's abusive background, Ben's also prone to anxiety and panic attacks, all of which are aggravated by Ben's parents who struggle with understanding Ben's identity.
As a pioneering novel about non-binary teens, the book has obvious significance: giving a voice to a group that doesn't really yet have one in YA literature. But while it does a remarkable job at articulating issues common to young people who identify as non-binary, it largely fails as a novel. The plot drags and meanders as it tries to cover lots of bases rather than tell a story. It also doesn't help that Ben is not a particularly sympathetic character. With his wide variety of issues, they come off as self-centered and insular. That's less Ben's fault than the author's: there's plenty of history which (if explained) could help the reader develop sympathy for Ben's struggle, but that history is stated (rather than shown), so the reader can only surmise and make assumptions. Some discussion of Ben's identity issue prior to deciding to come out, at a minimum, would have helped. After all, the pain of not being accepted hardly started when Ben came out. The way the book is written, one might come to the conclusion that all Ben cares about is being addressed with the correct pronoun, but there is so much more than that going on and it is never developed.
With Hannah's help and a relocation, Ben is able to finish school and have some space to reconsider what they want. Part of that search is a burgeoning relationship with best friend Nathan. But being in a romance is challenging to Ben, who doesn't necessary understand how to articulate love and sexual attraction as non-binary. From their family's abusive background, Ben's also prone to anxiety and panic attacks, all of which are aggravated by Ben's parents who struggle with understanding Ben's identity.
As a pioneering novel about non-binary teens, the book has obvious significance: giving a voice to a group that doesn't really yet have one in YA literature. But while it does a remarkable job at articulating issues common to young people who identify as non-binary, it largely fails as a novel. The plot drags and meanders as it tries to cover lots of bases rather than tell a story. It also doesn't help that Ben is not a particularly sympathetic character. With his wide variety of issues, they come off as self-centered and insular. That's less Ben's fault than the author's: there's plenty of history which (if explained) could help the reader develop sympathy for Ben's struggle, but that history is stated (rather than shown), so the reader can only surmise and make assumptions. Some discussion of Ben's identity issue prior to deciding to come out, at a minimum, would have helped. After all, the pain of not being accepted hardly started when Ben came out. The way the book is written, one might come to the conclusion that all Ben cares about is being addressed with the correct pronoun, but there is so much more than that going on and it is never developed.
Tuesday, November 26, 2019
Tin Heart, by Shivaun Plozza
Marlowe is a recent heart transplant recipient with an odd and quirky family. She has a militant vegan mother and a little brother named Pip who likes to dress up (usually as female literary figures). Her mother's nemesis is the butcher shop next door and the whole family engages in dramatic guerrilla protests against the store and its owner.
Marlowe has her own private vendetta with the butcher's son, which gradually grows (as these things do in romance books) into something more, much to her mother's horror.
But the ostensible main story of the novel is Marlowe's desire to learn more about the donor of her heart. She tries reaching out to the donor's family, but they don't want any contact. Obsessed, Marlowe can't let that sit and tracks them down anyway, becoming friends with the donor's sister, Carmen. This becomes awkward when Marlowe finally has to come clean about the connection that Marlowe shares with her.
Aussie YA is usually a bit strange and this book meets that expectation. The weird characters (not just the cross-dressing little brother, but all of the characters) is part of it, but the bigger issue is the lack of plot. There are a lot of digressions and plenty of subplots, but the story doesn't add up to much. Conflicts with brother, mother, Carmen, and the butcher boyfriend drift along, but it doesn't go anywhere and we end up pretty much where we started.
Marlowe has her own private vendetta with the butcher's son, which gradually grows (as these things do in romance books) into something more, much to her mother's horror.
But the ostensible main story of the novel is Marlowe's desire to learn more about the donor of her heart. She tries reaching out to the donor's family, but they don't want any contact. Obsessed, Marlowe can't let that sit and tracks them down anyway, becoming friends with the donor's sister, Carmen. This becomes awkward when Marlowe finally has to come clean about the connection that Marlowe shares with her.
Aussie YA is usually a bit strange and this book meets that expectation. The weird characters (not just the cross-dressing little brother, but all of the characters) is part of it, but the bigger issue is the lack of plot. There are a lot of digressions and plenty of subplots, but the story doesn't add up to much. Conflicts with brother, mother, Carmen, and the butcher boyfriend drift along, but it doesn't go anywhere and we end up pretty much where we started.
Maybe He Just Likes You, by Barbara Dee
Seventh grade is presenting challenges. The boys seem to do lots of stupid things. Some of them are just silly, but some of those things leave Mila feeling bad, like when a group of boys start touching her sweater or giving her hugs she doesn't want. More upsetting, they won't stop even when she asks them to.
She would tell someone, but there's no one to talk to. The female guidance counselor is out on leave and Mila isn't comfortable talking to a man about this. Mila's mother is having her own problems at work and Mila doesn't want to trouble her. Maybe she's just overreacting. The boys are just teasing anyway, right? That's what some of her friends think. In the end, a caring music teacher and a class in karate help Mila build the confidence necessary to address her harassers.
Excellent, albeit upsetting story about sexual harassment in middle school. Dee has a really good feel for the social behaviors of early adolescents and the story rings true. It's that plausibility that makes the tale so chilling. The actions of the boys fall into that uncomfortable area between teasing and harassment that divides not just the children, but the adults as well. It's no wonder that the kids are often struggling with defining what is acceptable and unacceptable behavior.
As usual, I didn't care for Mila's reluctance to seek help, which is a common ploy for dragging out a story, but more so than normal, I appreciated that it is her own struggle to find her voice that forms a big part of the story (and I was placated by the way that her silence was recognized as its own bad choice). Despite that little bit of gratuitous character abuse by the author, Mila comes across as a strong and inspirational heroine.
This is an important book and one that could facilitate a lot of great discussion among younger teens (in much the way that Speak has become for slightly older readers). It's important for girls and boys to recognize that boundaries exist at all ages and to think about what role they play in their own lives.
She would tell someone, but there's no one to talk to. The female guidance counselor is out on leave and Mila isn't comfortable talking to a man about this. Mila's mother is having her own problems at work and Mila doesn't want to trouble her. Maybe she's just overreacting. The boys are just teasing anyway, right? That's what some of her friends think. In the end, a caring music teacher and a class in karate help Mila build the confidence necessary to address her harassers.
Excellent, albeit upsetting story about sexual harassment in middle school. Dee has a really good feel for the social behaviors of early adolescents and the story rings true. It's that plausibility that makes the tale so chilling. The actions of the boys fall into that uncomfortable area between teasing and harassment that divides not just the children, but the adults as well. It's no wonder that the kids are often struggling with defining what is acceptable and unacceptable behavior.
As usual, I didn't care for Mila's reluctance to seek help, which is a common ploy for dragging out a story, but more so than normal, I appreciated that it is her own struggle to find her voice that forms a big part of the story (and I was placated by the way that her silence was recognized as its own bad choice). Despite that little bit of gratuitous character abuse by the author, Mila comes across as a strong and inspirational heroine.
This is an important book and one that could facilitate a lot of great discussion among younger teens (in much the way that Speak has become for slightly older readers). It's important for girls and boys to recognize that boundaries exist at all ages and to think about what role they play in their own lives.
Friday, November 01, 2019
Shadowscent, by P. M. Freestone
Rakel dreams of becoming a perfumer. Her strong sense of smell and her understanding of the science of scents gives her a good chance of success. But in her world, scents are power, so her goal
is ambitious. Ash is First
Prince Nisai’s bodyguard. When the
Prince is struck down by a poison of unknown origin, fate and circumstance
brings the two of them together. Racing against the calendar, they must find a cure. When an ancient text suggests that the antidote requires rare ingredients from all corners of the Empire, they are off on an
epic quest.
A rich and densely-constructed fantasy, packed full of
action. At first, the immense detail is
overwhelming and it’s hard to follow the story.
But as the dust settles, the story takes over, but only with some willful disregard of the layers and layers that the author piles on. I love cultural detail but
too much becomes distracting, particularly in the way it is used here to fill lulls in te story. Whenever the action starts to lag, suddenly we are conveniently introduced to a another legend or an unknown town or a new monster.
What we don’t get is much character development. The story shows us that Rakel and Ash are pawns in an imperial power
play. But within this book, they are
also Firestone’s pawns. If you like
vivid and complex settings and fast-packed action, that probably won’t matter
much, but I didn’t have much on which to hang.
[Disclaimer: I received an ARC of this book in return for
an honest review. The book is slated for
release on November 5, 2019]
Notes from My Captivity, by Kathy Parks
Many years ago, there was a Russian family -- the Osinovs -- who disappeared into the Siberian wilderness. Lots of rumors abounded about them. They became legendary for the powers they allegedly possessed, but even their existence was disputed. And while people sought them out, no one could ever find them.
Adrienne's stepfather Dan is obsessed with finding the family. He wrote a well-known article about them for The New York Times, but a similarly famous rebuttal has cast him into disgrace. His first attempt a few years ago to actually find them was a failure, but now he is trying again. Seventeen year-old Adrienne is coming along, mostly to see if Dan is right, but also to exorcise some ghosts of her own.
What begins as a great adventure turns into a horror story as all of the members of the expedition are killed, except for Adrienne. Marooned deep in Siberian forest, she is taken captive by the Osinov's, who not only exist, but also are very unhappy that she has found them. As she gets to know the family, she finds that everything about them is more complicate than any myth or legend.
A unusual story that starts as an adventure, becomes a survival story, and eventually turns into a spiritual quest (in a sort of Heart of Darkness way). The section is by far the most ambitious. It is also the least successful, but it gives the novel an unexpected gravitas. Ultimately, the story is about forgiveness, but it's a long and twisted journey to reach that stage.
Parks is a good writer. I enjoyed the Russian that is sprinkled liberally in the dialog. And I certainly liked the character Adrienne. The other characters appear too briefly or are too filtered by the language barrier to really make an impact. Still, each and every one was memorable.
Adrienne's stepfather Dan is obsessed with finding the family. He wrote a well-known article about them for The New York Times, but a similarly famous rebuttal has cast him into disgrace. His first attempt a few years ago to actually find them was a failure, but now he is trying again. Seventeen year-old Adrienne is coming along, mostly to see if Dan is right, but also to exorcise some ghosts of her own.
What begins as a great adventure turns into a horror story as all of the members of the expedition are killed, except for Adrienne. Marooned deep in Siberian forest, she is taken captive by the Osinov's, who not only exist, but also are very unhappy that she has found them. As she gets to know the family, she finds that everything about them is more complicate than any myth or legend.
A unusual story that starts as an adventure, becomes a survival story, and eventually turns into a spiritual quest (in a sort of Heart of Darkness way). The section is by far the most ambitious. It is also the least successful, but it gives the novel an unexpected gravitas. Ultimately, the story is about forgiveness, but it's a long and twisted journey to reach that stage.
Parks is a good writer. I enjoyed the Russian that is sprinkled liberally in the dialog. And I certainly liked the character Adrienne. The other characters appear too briefly or are too filtered by the language barrier to really make an impact. Still, each and every one was memorable.
Saturday, October 26, 2019
The Lost Girl, by Anne Ursu
Identical twins Iris and Lark may look alike but they couldn't be any more different from each other. Iris is the sensible and analytical one. Always on time and on top of things, the other kids think she is bossy and a know-it-all (even if she does know everything). It is those talents that help Iris take care of Lark. For where Iris is organized, Lark is distracted and scattered. Yet she is the artistic one, creating beauty and dreaming up some many clever stories and situations.
All the way until now, the two girls have been inseparable and united. But now in fifth grade, the school decides that Iris and Lark should be in separate classes and the twins are horrified at what will happen! Lark fears that the kids will make fun of her. Iris worries that if she isn't in the room, she won't be able to protect her sister.
Meanwhile, in the storefront that never seems to manage to keep a business for more than a few months, an inauspicious antique store has opened up. The mysterious owner of the shop, Mr. Green, posts odd signs out front ("We Are Here" and "Alice Where Are You?"). And while most people avoid the place, Iris finds it fascinating and starts spending time there. Doing so helps her escape her worries about Lark and is the perfect antidote to the horrible after school program (called "Awesome Girls!") that her mom has enrolled her in.
The story, which seems to owe a debt to Lark more than Iris meanders through many different topics (in addition to those mentioned above, a subplot involving the theft of many valuable objects and another about crows gathering in the neighborhood feature prominently). Many of these threads are tied together in the end, but it is a bit of a strain. The book lacks much foreshadowing or continuity, leaving the reader perplexed for most of the story about where all of this is actually going. I enjoyed the dynamic between the twins and the themes about sisterhood are the most interesting, but Ursu wants to take the story in many other directions and that did not work for me.
The book features numerous drawings by Erin Mcguire, one of my favorite children's artists.
All the way until now, the two girls have been inseparable and united. But now in fifth grade, the school decides that Iris and Lark should be in separate classes and the twins are horrified at what will happen! Lark fears that the kids will make fun of her. Iris worries that if she isn't in the room, she won't be able to protect her sister.
Meanwhile, in the storefront that never seems to manage to keep a business for more than a few months, an inauspicious antique store has opened up. The mysterious owner of the shop, Mr. Green, posts odd signs out front ("We Are Here" and "Alice Where Are You?"). And while most people avoid the place, Iris finds it fascinating and starts spending time there. Doing so helps her escape her worries about Lark and is the perfect antidote to the horrible after school program (called "Awesome Girls!") that her mom has enrolled her in.
The story, which seems to owe a debt to Lark more than Iris meanders through many different topics (in addition to those mentioned above, a subplot involving the theft of many valuable objects and another about crows gathering in the neighborhood feature prominently). Many of these threads are tied together in the end, but it is a bit of a strain. The book lacks much foreshadowing or continuity, leaving the reader perplexed for most of the story about where all of this is actually going. I enjoyed the dynamic between the twins and the themes about sisterhood are the most interesting, but Ursu wants to take the story in many other directions and that did not work for me.
The book features numerous drawings by Erin Mcguire, one of my favorite children's artists.
It's Not Like It's a Secret, by Misa Sugiura
Sana and her family have moved to California from Wisconsin. Her mother says it is because of the great new job her father has been offered. Sana thinks there is another reason: she suspects that her Dad is carrying on an affair. Sana has seen suspicious messages on her Dad's phone from a San Francisco area code and her father seems to spend a lot of time "working late." Moving to California will put him that much closer to this person.
Meanwhile, at her new school, Sana has fallen in love and the object of her affection is Jamie, a girl on the school's track team. Sana never given much thought to her orientation, but she's never quite clicked with boys. Thankfully, being gay at her new school is not a big deal, but race is. That is important because Sana is Japanese-American and Jamie is a Latina. As much as the two girls care for each other, there are tensions between their peer groups. Sana is expected to hang out with other Asians and Jamie with the Mexican kids.
Girl meets girl, girl loses girl, and you know the rest...typical romance. But there's some subtlety and some interesting topics raised. When Sana suspects that Jamie is cheating on her, it is too much like what her Dad is doing to her Mom and this give her time to reflect on what her mother is going through. Sana's Mom's concept of deferred happiness and forbearance driven by the traditional Japanese value of gaman gives Sana a role model to dissect and to which you can contrast herself.
Finally, there's a race angle. It's pretty brutal to take the complexities of American racial politics and lay them over the insecurities and petty squabbles of a high school. And yet, that really is happening. Sugiura has a good ear for the dynamics of it all and has given the story an authentic complexity which is generally missing in most writers.
Meanwhile, at her new school, Sana has fallen in love and the object of her affection is Jamie, a girl on the school's track team. Sana never given much thought to her orientation, but she's never quite clicked with boys. Thankfully, being gay at her new school is not a big deal, but race is. That is important because Sana is Japanese-American and Jamie is a Latina. As much as the two girls care for each other, there are tensions between their peer groups. Sana is expected to hang out with other Asians and Jamie with the Mexican kids.
Girl meets girl, girl loses girl, and you know the rest...typical romance. But there's some subtlety and some interesting topics raised. When Sana suspects that Jamie is cheating on her, it is too much like what her Dad is doing to her Mom and this give her time to reflect on what her mother is going through. Sana's Mom's concept of deferred happiness and forbearance driven by the traditional Japanese value of gaman gives Sana a role model to dissect and to which you can contrast herself.
Finally, there's a race angle. It's pretty brutal to take the complexities of American racial politics and lay them over the insecurities and petty squabbles of a high school. And yet, that really is happening. Sugiura has a good ear for the dynamics of it all and has given the story an authentic complexity which is generally missing in most writers.
Somewhere Only We Know, by Maurene Goo
Lucky is about to break it big. A major K-Pop star, she’s just finished a
successful Asian tour and she’s about to come to the States to make her North American
debut. But like all K-Pop singers, her
image and her life has been carefully crafted and managed. Somewhere along the way to gaining her
success, it all stopped being fun. On
the last night of her tour in Hong Kong, she decides to break free and just try
to recapture some of that joy she used to feel in her life.
Jack wants to become a photographer, but there is no way he
would ever be allowed by his family. When he decides
to take a gap year, his father insists that Jack work as an intern at his
bank. Jack hates the work, but in the
evenings he practices his photography.
He’s discovered a talent for being a paparazzo,taking pictures of celebrities and capturing them
in compromising places and positions.
When he spots Lucky, Jack feels that he’s hit paydirt. Exclusive pictures of the
carefully sheltered pop star could be the thing to vaults him to fame and a career. The fact that she wants to hang out with
him just means more opportunities to get photos. But as the two young people spend the next twenty-four hours touring through Hong Kong, they both find what they are looking for and it
isn’t what they were expecting.
By the numbers escapist romance. There’s not much of a surprise here, but the
novel benefits from Goo’s fluid writing, the fun she has showing off the sights
of Hong Kong, and two lovable characters.
They are stock stuff, but all the right buttons are pushed. Enjoyable and fun.
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