Wednesday, February 26, 2025
Biology Lessons, by Melissa Kantor
Thursday, February 20, 2025
Stay With My Heart, by Tashie Bhuiyan
Friday, February 14, 2025
Someone To Love, by Melissa de la Cruz
Full of lots of partying and alcohol, just to add to the poor life choices depicted throughout, this turns into something of a slog to get through. While Liv is described as an exceptional girl, we don't see many of her strengths. We're told that she does well in school, but she spends far more time obsessing about a useless boyfriend than she does about mastering her classes.
Sunday, February 09, 2025
Every Time You Go Away, by Abigail Johnson
When he's at his grandparents, his closest friend is Rebecca, the girl next door. They've confided to each other and the last time they saw each other, those feeling spilled over into a romance of sorts. But then he went away and he didn't return for four years, without any communication at all..
In those intervening four years, Rebecca's life came apart. A car accident took the life of her father and put her permanently in a wheel chair. Her mother, wracked with grief and unable to forgive her daughter, has distanced herself, abandoning Rebecca. So, when Ethan returns, it's almost a godsend to her to have her old confidant back. But the reality of Ethan can't match the fantasies that Rebecca has fostered all of these years. He has issues of his own to deal with. When he learns that his Mom has skipped out on rehab and disappeared, he is determined to find her whatever the cost might be to him or to Rebecca.
A powerful story about parental neglect and the process of reconciliation and healing. Ethan and Rebecca's pain is so visceral and their struggles to cope with their own demons while finding some space to open their hearts to each other so heartbreaking that this is a hard read. It took for a while to get through the story, but that was no fault of the writing. It's simply a story that slows you down as there is so much going on with these complex characters.
It's difficult to imagine a happy ending for this story that would feel realistic and Johnson doesn't attempt to deliver one. Instead, the characters get to be honest with each other and make decisions about what that means for their futures. There's some hope offered in all this, but no joyful reunion or lasting amends. Sometimes, you're not meant to live happily ever after, just to move forward.
Thursday, January 30, 2025
Imagine Us Happy, by Jennifer Yu
Stella not only suffers from depression, but also from a neglectful father and a clinging mother. The parents use Stella as a weapon to launch at each other -- each accusing the other of being the worse parent. Traumatized by her parents' behavior, Stella seeks comfort where she can and stumbles across moody intellectual Kevin at a party. When Kevin isn't drowning himself in existential literature or contemplating doom and gloom, he practices self-harm -- a behavior that he too weaponizes against Stella, but claiming that she bears some responsibility for it. Barely into the relationship, Kevin's nasty side appears as he launches into abusive jealous tirades against Stella's friendships with other boys. Stella, desperate to keep the one thing she feels is "safe" puts up with Kevin's abuse. You get the picture. It all ends (at the start of the novel) when Stella accepts that she can't help Kevin and needs to just let him go.
Like Sarah Dessen's Dreamland, it is pretty obvious from the beginning that Kevin is manipulative and Stella is manipulatable. Between her depression and low self-esteem and the poor parental exemplars, she's completely unequipped to deal with Kevin's head games. Any sane person would run far far away from him, but Stella is easily sucked in.
The light in this otherwise grueling story, is the authenticity of the characters and the insights they shed on themselves. Stella, her mother, and their friends all seem enlightened (not that it halts the corrosiveness of their relationships). The males are (Kevin and Stella's Dad), however, are pretty useless. Whether those insights would actually make a difference seems unlikely given that the type of people who fall into these toxic relationships generally don't accept advice from others.
Stepping Off, by Jordan Sonnenblick
The arrival of Covid is interesting but not really organic to the story. And the book loses its focus as Sonnenblick shifts the story to the challenges that the three of them face trying to sort out their feelings in isolation (not that any of it seems to stop them from spending a lot of time in close proximity). For that reason and others, there really isn't anything essential about the Covid Pandemic to the plot and it is actually distracting. I’ve been waiting for a good historical YA set during the Pandemic. This might have been it, but the first 2/3 of the novel isn’t about Covid and thus the story isn’t either.
I still loved the characters, their near misses and misunderstandings, and the anxieties about the changing nature of their friendships are topics that are all handled well.
Monday, January 20, 2025
Dispatches From Parts Unknown, by Bryan Bliss
Saturday, January 18, 2025
We Shall Be Monsters, by Alyssa Wees
But the story here is only a small part of the novel. Behind the magic and the monsters lies two mother and daughter relationships with much more everyday magic and drama. It's a story, for example, where cutting your mother open and eating her heart can be both literal and figurative. And that fuzzy elision between reality and fantasy leads to some fantastic prose that feels deep and meaningful.
The story's complexity, vast cast, unclear direction, and jumpy narrative makes the book hard to read. I did so very slowly, but I was left with a clear sense that I would only understand the story through re-reading it a few more times. That's too much like work and the tale simply didn't interest me enough to put in the time. A hard pass on this for me due to its demanding storytelling, even though I enjoyed the beauty of the writing.
Wednesday, January 08, 2025
The Fragile Ordinary, by Samantha Young
But then she meets Tobias, a boy with a bad attitude who hangs out with a bad crowd. She'd ignore him, but he has a spark that intrigues her and he turns out to be smarter and nicer than he appears. Soon, as always happens in the world of YA, she is swept away and spreading her wings. That is, until they are riven apart by forces outside their control.
The novel never quite worked for me. It's not the hackneyed plot, for that particular crime would condemn a thousand YA romances. It's not the characters -- who are wondrously diverse and intriguing. It's the storytelling, which is surprisingly clunky and wooden. The story meanders with frequent surprises along the lines of "oh, and by the way, there is this character who I have never mentioned in the first 200 pages who is suddenly the central focus of the story" or "remember that subplot I labored over at the beginning? never mind, I've just resolved it in a page." In other words, real interest killers.
I've liked Young's other books but this was just painful.
Saturday, January 04, 2025
The Notes, by Catherine Con Morse
Wednesday, January 01, 2025
Everything Within and In Between, by Nikki Barthelmess
Tuesday, December 24, 2024
Beasts and Beauty, by Soman Chainani
Saturday, December 21, 2024
A Wolf Called Wander, by Rosanne Parry
Thursday, December 19, 2024
Wolfpack, by Amelia Brunskill
One day, they wake up to find one of their number is missing. Worried about the consequences of the defection being discovered and convinced that she will eventually return, the girls attempt to cover up the disappearance. But when they find out that the missing girl was pregnant and that she was subsequently murdered, they start to investigate what actually happen. They end of unraveling layers of corruption within their utopia that exposes that their home is far from safe.
As I never tire of saying, verse novels are either great or terrible. There is no half-way point. Usually, a verse novel works best for a sad melancholy story because it amps up the poignancy of the protagonist's angst. Here, the spare verse makes the story more suspenseful and more paranoid. With so many characters, its hard to get much development in them, but it doesn't matter as the story just races ahead. The surprise ending isn't well foreshadowed but the conclusion is satisfying and thought provoking. Entertaining and engaging.
Sunday, December 15, 2024
The Cat Who Saved Books, by Sosuke Natsukawa
Thursday, December 12, 2024
Girls Like Girls, by Hayley Kiyoko
Thursday, December 05, 2024
Wolfwood, by Marianna Baer
Thursday, November 28, 2024
One Small Thing, by Erin Watt
Sunday, November 24, 2024
Gut Reaction, by Kirby Larson & Quinn Wyatt
Overshadowing this drama is another issue: Tess keeps experiencing episodes of extreme gastro-intestinal pain. Certain foods seem to hit it off and she starts trying to alter her diet to prevent the "porcupine" inside her gut from attacking her. That works for a while, but the episodes become more frequent and more intense so that she renames it a "knife" instead. In the end, she lands in the hospital with a diagnosis of Crohn's disease. And now the question is what sort of chance can she have to have a normal life (let alone continue in competitive baking) with such a debilitating disease?
Crohn's is a particularly embarrassing disease because it deals with a part of our bodies that we don't usually talk about. And for a middle schooler like Tess it would be particularly awkward. So, I think it was really important to create a book like this in which a young reader facing this condition for the rest of their life could find some representation.
And it's a nicely done book. Tess has enough of a sense of humor to make the rather serious stuff she's dealing with not overwhelm the reader. I'm less taken by all the other stuff in this story. The baking story often distracts, but the book would have been too short without something else for Tess to do. And having it be food related carries a nice irony. The dead father seemed less useful as a storyline and never really got developed. It's also terrible cliché. Perhaps letting the Dad live would have been better.