While well-written, the pacing is slow and the themes could easily have been further developed. We're never exactly clear what happened to Larkin back at her school, Meanwhile, the mother and her story doesn't really move beyond a brief recollection (and an even briefer dialog). Mills does a fine job in showing us how sad and depressed Larkin is and in capturing her panic attacks. However, lacking the context deprives us of much of the punch or the necessary reader empathy to make it be something dramatic.
Saturday, December 30, 2023
Larkin on the Shore, by Jean Mills
Thursday, December 28, 2023
100 Days of Sunlight, by Abbie Emmons
Weston is a double amputee -- the result of an untreated infection from an accident three years prior. Through flashbacks, he describes the process he went through to come back, working through not only his disability but also his anger at his fate -- knowledge that he applies to Tessa's situation. However, he has an advantage: she doesn't know he's an amputee.
Over the next hundred days, through patience and stubborn persistence, Weston works through Tessa's barriers and gradually helps her deal with her blindness. However, he knows that one day soon she'll get her sight back and then she'll see him as he truly is. And he fears what she will do.
A terribly sweet and utterly gratuitous romance. Weston is pretty much the Perfect Boy -- kind, considerate, generous, with just a small amount of naughtiness (he gets into fist fights). He adores Tessa. And of course, he has nothing better to do than dote on her for three months. Needless to say, we know that his silly fears about her hating him when she sees his disability are nothing big, so we're flipping the pages waiting for that swoon-worthy happily-ever-after kiss. And this is the kind of story that delivers just what the readers want. In sum, pure unadulterated literary junk food. Grab a pint of Ben & Jerry's or a package of Oreos and dig in!
Monday, December 25, 2023
The Land of Neverendings, by Kate Saunders
Amidst that longing for a lost toy and perhaps inspired by being cast in the lead for a school production of Alice, Emily stumbles across a portal to the world of Smockeroon, the land of the toys. There she is presented with the entrancing idea that she could reconnect with Bluey (and perhaps even her own sister). However, behind this opening between the "hardworld" and Smockeroon lies a sinister force -- a giant toad who wants to import all of the sadness of Emily's world into the world of toys, in an attempt to destroy the joy and happiness of that latter place.
In a very British way, this riff on CS Lewis and Lewis Carroll (with a unacknowledged debt to Pixar) explores the grieving of a child told through our relationship with toys and play. The story is a bit chaotic and difficult to follow and the deeper themes will definitely fly over the heads of young readers. Still, it's a clever book and it's nice to read something so sweet and innocent. Entirely suitable for all ages.
Saturday, December 23, 2023
If He Had Been With Me, by Laura Nowlin
Autumn and Finn grew up together as best friends and next door neighbors. Their mothers always assumed that they would end up together as a couple. But by the time high school begins, they aren't really talking to each other anymore. Autumn has Jamie and Finn has found Sylvie. They both couldn't be happier in their respective relationships. But somehow all that shared history bring Autumn and Finn back to each in their times of need.
Mapped out over four years of high school, Nowlin's lushly written novel captures the trials and drama of Autumn and Finn's development and their largely inevitable coming together. While beautifully written, covering such a long expanse of time leads to a lot of jumping around and senior year is largely a blur in this retelling. Throughout, I struggled to understand where the story was really going. Yes, there are plenty of indications along the way that Finn and Autumn really ought to be together, but the book is full of so much more than that (subplots ranging from a pregnancy to a divorce to drugs to sexual abuse) that I wondered what the point of the book really was. It's all very pretty and well-told, but does one need to cram every single good idea into the same book?
All that is a minor complaint compared to my thoughts on the book's shocking ending. I won't spoil the story for others, but I feel very strongly that Nowlin basically ruined the story for me in the last ten pages with an unnecessary, pointless, and completely out-of-the-blue plot twist that lacks any foundation. I'd suggest stopping on page 381 because I'm now left seriously wondering why I read those first 380 pages.
Wednesday, December 20, 2023
Solimar: The Sword of the Monarchs, by Pam Munoz Ryan
The gift comes at an awkward moment, when the king is absent and an attack from a neighboring kingdom threatens her home. While she is only a child, as soon as the attacking king learns of her new powers, he wants to harness them for himself and he tries to detain her. To prevent that from happening, Solimar flees the castle and tries to find her father so she can warn him. She hopes that he'll find allies, beat back the attackers, and also save the butterflies. An epic voyage through uncharted waterways awaits!
Like all of Ryan's other novels, this one has a distinctly Hispanic flavor and the setting is vaguely Mexican. That is manifested mostly through terms, titles, and foods, but also the context (the attack occurs while Solimar is planning her quince). I always enjoy this stylistic twist in her books although in this case it would have been nice to have a glossary at the back to help with less familiar terms.
More problematically, I didn't enjoy the story very much. Unlike many of her novels, the stress here is on action. Character development gets a very short shrift. Solimar is supposed to go through a great transformation in her ordeal, but I didn't understand what it really was and I actually didn't care much either. As for the action, it isn't well told, often requiring reading and re-reading passages to understand what is happening. There's a lot going on and never a dull moment but it is hard to follow. Definitely not in the same class as Ryan's Esperanza Rising or Becoming Naomi Leon.
Sunday, December 17, 2023
Breda's Island, by Jessie Ann Foley
As an overall story, there's nothing new here. The rebellious teen and the crotchety old man straightening each other out is the worst form of trope -- a fantasy worth of a Hallmark show. And the rural Irish setting is full of plenty of stereotypical blarney. But the book is full of surprises.
Breda has never had a father in the picture and returning to her mother's home gives her a chance to track him down. Doing so dredges up a lot of buried grudges and anger. It also causes her to stumble over the fact that her grandfather was also born out of wedlock. And in his days, such children were abandoned to orphanages where they were subject to severe abuse. His trauma is largely suppressed but played no small part is how he treated Breda's Mom (and thus Breda). Coming to terms with Breda's feelings about the lack of a father means also dealing with her grandfather's legacy. The result is a surprisingly complex story with pretty intense themes about family and abandonment, all of which might be a bit intense for middle readers but make for a surprisingly satisfying mature novel.
Saturday, December 16, 2023
The Hunger Between Us, by Marina Scott
In is the summer of 1942, the siege has been in place for a year. In that time, the weak have largely died off. The survivors are the resourceful. Liza is a survivor. Through petty theft and deceit, she has managed to scour up enough food to keep living. As the story begins, Liza is secretly burying her dead mother in order to prevent officials from discovering the death and taking away her Mom's ration card. Liza's best friend Aka comes across her after the disposal of the body and tells Liza that she herself is going to go to the "Mansion" (the headquarters of the NKVD -- the secret police) to earn some food. There's plenty of food for the officials and they are willing to share what they have with pretty young girls for a price. Liza begs Aka not to go, but what alternatives are left?
When Aka fails to return later, Liza goes out of her mind with fear for what has happened and starts to search for the girl. It's dangerous to poke at the lair of the NKVD and Liza's desperate search takes her in dangerous places where a combination of strong wits, sheer luck, and a bitter detremination to survive carry her through. Along the way, she renews acquaintances with two boys she knew from school who have taken drastically different paths: Luka (who hides underground and has abandoned his pride and humanity) and Maksim (who serves in the local constabulary and tries to enforce the law in the face of anarchy). Both boys try to help Liza, but in the end she has to take her own path to confront horrible secrets about the depths to which people will sink.
As grim and troubling as its subject matter, The Hunger Between Us explores what lines can and cannot be crossed and what survival really means. It's a brutal story populated with starvation and desperation. Scenes of physical and sexual violence, numerous references to (off-page) rape, murder, and cannibalism feature prominently. All of this, however, is just a setting for the very difficult decisions that Liza makes throughout the book. And she's definitely no saint. Her primary virtue is her ability to survive and by the end of the story she has plenty of faults to atone for. But observing her story in its context forces the reader to consider what they would do in the same place and that proves devastating. A powerful and memorable book and an unusual one of the genre.
Tuesday, December 12, 2023
Friends Like These, by Jennifer Lynn Alvarez
At the party, Jake and Jessica get separated and, before Jessica can realize what is happening, someone is livestreaming hidden camera footage of Jake and Tegan kissing! Worse, they have started to take off their clothes! Utterly humiliated by her boyfriend's very public betrayal, Jessica flees the party vowing to have nothing further to do with Jake or Tegan. But the next morning, Jake turns up covered in blood with no memory of his infidelity or of anything else that happened. And Tegan has gone missing.
A rather steamy whodunnit that annoyed me the deeper I got into it. The characters spend a lot of time obfuscating the investigation, which drags everything out and more often than not puts them in a worse position. There are odd priorities as well, with characters more concerned about statutory rape than homicide. And finally a large part of the solution to the mystery relies upon information only introduced in the final forty pages of the book, which is frustrating for anyone trying to figure things out along the way.
Sunday, December 10, 2023
The Rat Queen, by Pete Hautman
When Annie turns ten, her father gives her a peculiar instruction. Henceforth, whenever she does something she regrets, she must write it down on a slip of paper and stuff the paper into a hole in the floor. By doing so, she will be assuaged of all guilt and regret. She does so and is surprised to find that it works. But there also seem to be curious side effects: the neighborhood becomes infested with rats and Annie seems to have stopped growing. After her father makes several mysterious trips back to Litvania, he announces that they must go back together and it is there that the Litvanian queen reveals all.
A dark and fairly sinister story with great depth and plenty of color, but whose actual story felt uneven and unengaging. Litvania, while fictional, is a lovely amalgam of Latvian and Lithuanian culture (neither of which is commonly found in American literature). The story is littered with the dark and macabre fairy tales of Litvania, which riff nicely on the original Grimms (i.e., non-Disneyfied) Tales. The rats and the entire concept behind the "eater of sins" is fascinating. This is a story whose concepts will stick with me for some time.
It is thus a shame that the story is so lame. For the first two hundred pages, it is terribly slow and it took me some fortitude (and most of a week) to plow ahead, but then everything speeds up at the end in seeming recklessness. Either way, I found the reading more of a chore than a pleasure, no matter how much I enjoy the Baltic and folkloric references.
Sunday, December 03, 2023
The Melancholy of Summer, by Louisa Onome
To everyone's surprise, it turns out Summer has family to help her. Her cousin Olu, whom Summer barely knows, has made it big in Japan as a singer and is willing to take Summer in. However, Olu is only twenty and has big issues of her own. While Olu is wealthy enough to take care of Summer, she is in no position emotionally to handle the responsibility and Summer is simply counting down the days until she turns eighteen.
For Summer, it's all a bit too much. In denial about being abandoned, she can't navigate the waves of big feels she has. The wear and tear of spending the past year scraping by has also taken its toll. And now, with her friends graduating and going away to college, Summer is aware that everyone is moving on and abandoning her.
I enjoyed the unusual ethnicity of the characters (Summer's Nigerian and Olu is Nigerian-Japanese). Summer's love for skateboarding is a bit quirky and her resourcefulness in using it and the city busses to get around is pretty unusual. However, the novel annoyed me with the way it dragged out the story through Summer's stubbornness, the inability of characters to finish important conversations, and the eventual swift resolution of all of the problems in the last twenty pages. I didn't see the growth and it felt artificial.
Saturday, December 02, 2023
Wishing Season, by Anica Mrose Rossi
But as the summer comes to a close and Lily is about to return to school without Anders by her side, she has to move on. Learning how to make new friends, accept that the overlap is temporary, and most importantly find a way to keep her dead brother in her heart while making room for the future becomes her summer journey in this sleepy lyrical book about grief.
It was all very beautiful, but this treatment of death and grief didn't really break any new ground and there have been stronger books on the subject.
Wednesday, November 29, 2023
Look No Further, by Rioghnach Robinson and Siofra Robinson
Ali is a local girl, a high achiever, and yet she feels out of place amidst the artsy types at the school. She slavishly copies the other students in how they dress and even in the art they create. She has little sense of who she is.
When the two of them get assigned to work on a project together to trace how their heritage has informed their art, they quickly make a shocking discovery: Niko and Ali have the same father! Neither of them have ever met him, but with some research, they discover that he might be living in New York. So, while trying to keep up on their studies, they decide to try to track him down to see if they can reconnect with him. The search causes both of them to confront the parts of themselves that they are uncomfortable with and subsequently to grow.
Overall, this a well-written story about self-identity and finding oneself.. For Ali, this is the traditional trope of discovering her own voice by ceasing to copy others. It also involves her becoming comfortable embracing her feelings for another girl. For Niko, it is about connecting with his Asianess (raising several issues about anti-Asian racism along the way). Either way, the novel has a well-paced dramatic arc and delivers a very satisfactory ending.
Saturday, November 25, 2023
The Fight for Midnight, by Dan Solomon
That's the set up that places Alex at the Texas statehouse in the summer of 2013 as the Senate debated HB2, a now largely-forgotten attempt to restrict abortion access. The events are a matter of public record and the book sticks largely to the facts of the case (the author was a journalist covering the protests) so the plot is less important than the story, which tracks Alex's evolution from an apolitical and apathetic young man to a committed activist. By the end of the story, his personal issues that form such a central role in his life largely fade away in comparison to his investment in the eventual outcome of Wendy Davis's historic filibuster. Of course, a few years later the repeal of Roe v Wade would largely overtake the now seemingly small fry of that debate, so the novel is really less about any historic achievement than it is about how the events impacted Alex's life. And that proves to be a surprisingly satisfying read.
Friday, November 24, 2023
The Secret Sisters, by Avi
A good historical novel for young readers that exposes readers to a variety of issues including women's enfranchisement (and the reaction against it), classism, and rural poverty. Ida's stubbornness is touted as far more of a virtue than it probably is, but the book's allegiance to standing up for your beliefs at all costs is unequivocally clear. A fast paced and enjoyable read.
Thursday, November 23, 2023
Rosie Loves Jack, by Mel Darbon
She figures out a plan and runs away from home. At first, everything goes well, but when winter storms cancel the trains, Rose has to navigate the not-so-nice streets of London. But she persists because she absolutely needs to get to Jack.
Told in Rose's voice, Darbon does an outstanding job of portraying a confusing and often threatening world as seen through the eyes of her young neurodivergent protagonist. That's a real challenge and Darbon is clever in her way of depicting Rose's fine observational skills with in the bounds of her challenges at communication. Some of the scenes in the book are downright terrifying, but the book avoids gratuitous melodrama in their depiction. Rose herself shows inspiring fortitude and strength throughout but in a way which respects the challenges she experiences in her life.
Tuesday, November 21, 2023
Down Came the Rain, by Jennifer Mathieu
Eliza comes from a well-off family, but that didn't protect them from the flood waters and they have been forced to move in with other family while their house is rebuilt. Meanwhile, the flooding of her school means that she will now be taking classes at a neighboring high school, where the students are traditionally disadvantaged.
Eliza, who has been concerned with climate change for some time, sees Harvey are a warning that she must work harder to reverse the damage, knowing that it may be too late. She decides to take action and puts together a club to educate her fellow students and promote more sustainable practices at school.
Javier was much luckier. There wasn't any damage at his place, which is good since his family would never have been able to afford to rebuild, but the hurricane still has left its mark. Whenever it rains now, Javier gets frightened and curls up into a ball. He's falling apart but doesn't understand why. Into his world (and his high school) comes Eliza and her club seems the perfect antidote for what is causing his fears. It doesn't hurt that he finds Eliza inspiring and attractive.
While the club's efforts promise lots of positive changes, Eliza becomes frustrated at her inability to speed up the changes that she knows the world needs. She loses her perspective, causing her to commit a terrible error that could well ruin both of their lives and derail their goals.
While at times preachy, the story is an entertaining and engaging young teen book about climate change anxiety. It also takes on classism and racism, but not in any particularly new way. For me, the most notable thing was the effort that Mathieu put in to showing adults struggling with the aftermath of the hurricane as well. The teachers, in particular, were much more fleshed out as people than they commonly are (naturally enough, as the author is a school teacher). This carried over to a really nice depiction of the troubled relationship between Eliza and her Dad. It wasn't so much that the adults were the subject, but it was nice to give them a little depth and show that it wasn't only the kids who were hurt.
Monday, November 20, 2023
The Language of Cherries, by Jen Marie Hawkins
Oskar has every reason to despise Americans. It was an American tourist who caused the accident where his family were killed. Five years later, Oskar hasn't been able to get over the loss and it has afflicted him with a stutter that he self-medicates with marijuana. But despite her nationality, there's something about Evie that draws him close: her paintings. She has somehow drawn pictures of his family and of events from his childhood that she could not possibly have known about. He is obsessed with finding out why.
Embarrassed by his speech problems, he stays mute around her and she in turn misinterprets this as a language barrier. Liberated by the idea that he can't understand her, she opens up and freely confesses her innermost thoughts -- her anger at her mother, her longing for her Abuela back in Miami, and her loneliness. The more she confides, the more Oskar realizes he can't continue to let this go on. He needs to come clean, but worries about what will happen when she learns the truth.
An extremely slow-paced and lyrical work full of unusual eclectic elements: Evie's Cuban heritage, Oskar's exotic mix of taciturn Scandinavian and pagan Scots, and touches of magic through the cherry trees. The blurbs describe this as magical realism, but it isn't really that grandiose. Instead, this is more a subtle supernatural element that enlivens but doesn't distract. The characters are all quite memorable, but it is more of a study than a story. The plot alludes to whole slew of plot points (e.g., forgiveness, mother-daughter conflict, intergenerational understanding, and coming of age) but the book is more of a mood piece and there's very little development.
Sunday, November 19, 2023
Lola at Last, by J C Peterson
It's very rough going. Lola is a mean girl and a terrible snob. Unaccustomed to having to face consequences or take responsibility for herself, she's singularly unprepared for hiking nature trails. So, she stumbles from one bad move to another, alienating everyone around her until she has no one left. Forced to finally owns up to her situation, she manages to navigate her redemption. Part of that involves shedding her toxic former friends and ex-boyfriend and finding new (and healthier) relationships. Reconciling with her twin sister is also part of the equation.
Loosely based on Pride and Prejudice, this book is lively and quick reading. I imagine that for fans of the original, the story will be seen as amusing and clever. For myself, I found Lola too grating, nasty, and unsympathetic to ever really engage with. Lydia Bennet worked as a character because of the time period in which she was living, but in the contemporary world a vain young woman who delights in knocking others down really don't succeed. That Lola wins the nice boy and learns how to make a sincere apology in the end is not enough -- modern society has much higher expectations for young women. Were I to meet Lola IRL, I would almost certainly dislike her and I would never trust her.
Saturday, November 18, 2023
The Spirit Bares Its Teeth, by Andrew Joseph White
That's when things start getting very scary. Silas quickly notices that the Veil is particularly thin around the school, a sign of unsettled spirits. The Headmaster, it turns out, collects souvenir trophies of the people he's killed and their desecration haunts the place. But there is deeper evil afoot. The students at the school are disappearing in particularly gruesome ways -- through medical experiments conducted in the basement. But by the time Silas uncovers the full extent of the horror (and the widespread involvement of the men around her) it may be too late to do anything about it.
Beyond the extremely graphic depictions of eviscerations, involuntary surgeries (without anesthesia), and lots of blood, triggers in this novel include rape, molestation, bullying, and self-harm. In other words, there's an awful lot of difficult material to digest here. Personally, I found that I needed to take breaks (particularly in the second half of the book where the scenes become notably more intense).
So, why read it at all? Despite being a painful story, I found it compelling because it is very well written and because much of the tortures described in the book are based on the real abuses committed by the medical profession in the period. It is a work of fiction, but raises many uneasy questions about how we define abnormality and deviance. Fans of Michel Foucault's Discipline and Punish will be in their element. Readers with sensitive feels should almost certainly avoid this book.
Sunday, November 12, 2023
Actually Super, by Adi Alsaid
Ostensibly a spectacular road trip, this fascinating spiritual work about what ultimately makes us good and bad is a strikingly original work. I was drawn in by Isabel's grasping for meaning and value in a world that has grown so cynical and distrustful of such searches. When I was growing up, there were a number of popular novels that combined good storytelling with philosophical exploration -- where a fantastic journey led to enlightenment (Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance, The World According to Garp, and Illusions amongst others) but that style of novel writing has largely fallen out of fashion. Alsaid, whose previous work (Before Takeoff) was about the Rapture taking place at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, is a bold enough writer to dust off this old form.
The result is a book that, while set in the current day, becomes timeless in its universal search for meaning. It could not occur at a better time. We know that the past few years have been particularly hard on the mental health of young people. In our age full of cynical politics, climate change, pandemic lockdowns, and short attention spans, Actually Super speaks to recapturing meaning and appreciating the small kindness that we can all do -- the ways we can all become superheroes. A book like this calls on the reader to set aside the harmful messages and look for goodness instead in the little things that make us so similar to each other all around the world. It's an inspiration and an unforgettable read.