Wednesday, December 17, 2014

100 Sideways Miles by Andrew Smith

Where do I begin with this book?  It's so hard to describe in a way that doesn't sound drab.  It's about high school boys.  Okay...  They go on a road trip.  Sure.  There's a girl.  Naturally.

See what I mean?  100 Sideways Miles is a realistic, coming-of-age story filled with raunchy humor and sweet emotions all at the same time.  I've found this to be a hard sell in my library just because it's not really "about" anything specific.  But students who are willing to give it a shot will surely be rewarded.

High schooler Finn Easton has spent most of his life defined by two things:
1.  When he was a little boy, Finn and Mother were involved in a freak accident when a truck headed for the knackery overturned and a dead horse fell off the overpass onto them below.  It killed Finn's mother and left him with a broken back.  He still bears a scar from the accident and is epileptic.  He occasionally has seizures where he blanks out for minutes or hours at a time.
2.  His father wrote a science-fiction novel that amassed a cult following.  The main character is a boy named Finn.

Finn has few acquaintances other than his best friend, Cade, a beer-drinking, tobacco-chewing, profanity-spewing star of the baseball team.  He largely keeps to himself because people inevitably want to talk about his dad's book.  When he meets new student Julia, Finn finds himself falling in love for the first time.

There is much to like about this book.  I loved how funny Cade is and how good a friend he is to Finn.  For instance, one year before the state academic test, Cade convinces the entire sophomore class to just bubble in C-A-D-E over and over onto the answer sheet.  They perform so highly, the governor himself comes to the school to congratulate them on their outstanding academic achievement and gives them all an ice cream party.

I also like how real Finn seems as a character.  He's not particularly outgoing and often answers "Um," whenever asked a question he can't/doesn't want to answer.  As indicated by the title, the book is all about journeys - figurative and literal.  And no one takes a journey without coming out changed on the other side.


Tuesday, December 16, 2014

Dream a Little Dream, by Kerstin Gier

At last!  Another book from the delightful Kerstin Gier, whose Ruby Red series was a fun, romantic, comical time-traveling adventure.  I've been eager to see what Gier would produce next, and now it's almost here.  Dream a Little Dream will be released in April, 2015.

This is book 1 in The Silver Trilogy.  Teenager Liv Silver and her sister, Mia, have lived all over the world with their parents.  The book begins with Liv and Mia arriving in England to join their mother, who is supposed to be lecturing at Oxford.  They cannot wait to live in a quaint English cottage filled with the possibility of charm and mystery.  However, upon arriving in London, they find their mother has met a man and plans for them all to move into his house along with his twin children.  Although there are the usual hiccups and disagreements when this new plan is announced, everyone in the household begins to genuinely gets along.

One night, Liv has a dream that feels incredibly real.  She follows her future stepbrother, Grayson, into a cemetery where he meets up with three other boys from school.  They perform a ritual, asking the "Lord of Shadows and Darkness" to show them who will be part of their circle.  Naturally, Liv falls out of the tree she's been hiding in right at this moment.  Only later will she learn out what she's been "chosen" for.

The book is part Inception, part Raven Boys (by Maggie Stiefvater), with Gier's knack for humor and a taste of Gossip Girl thrown into the mix.  As we previously saw in Ruby Red, she writes wonderfully real teenage girls, who are sarcastic, flawed, and spunky all at once.  As Liv gets pulled farther into this mysterious dream world, she begins to fall for one of the boys, Henry.  Their budding romance is genuine and sweet.

My only complaint about this book is that Gier spends a lot of time exploring dream worlds, but never really gets around to Liv's part in the secret circle.  When the moment finally arrives, it feels too rushed.  However, because we have 2 more books yet to come, the ending is only the beginning.

Review given in exchange for an advance reader's copy from Net Galley.

One additional comment: I really hate the cover.  The purple door, bubbles, butterflies, and pink curly script are all misleading.  The book was really a bit dark and sinister in some places, and I think could appeal to boys and girls if the bookseller or librarian talks it up enough.  However, NO TEENAGE BOY that I've met would touch this book with a ten-foot pole based on this cover.  maybe they'll change it before publication?

1/16/15 UPDATE  Yay!  They did change the cover after all.  The new one is still kinda' girly, but at least it better reflects the darker aspects of the book.

Tuesday, December 2, 2014

Vanishing Girls, by Lauren Oliver

Review given in exchange for a digital review copy from Edelweiss.

Vanishing Girl, the newest (to be released March 2015) from Lauren Oliver, switches POV between two sisters, Nick and Dara.  Both are close in age and look similar to each other, but their actions are far different.  Nick, the older sister, is more responsible, follows the rules, and looks out for Dara.  The younger sister, on the other hand, is sneaky, impulsive, and hiding secrets.  But perhaps, so is Nick?

The book revolves around a car crash: Nick was driving, Dara was badly hurt.  What happened, exactly, isn't revealed until the end.  Nick can't remember and Dara doesn't want to think about it.  The timeline jumps around ("Before" and "After") and also switches between both girls, which can sometimes make the plot fuzzy and hard to follow.  Of course, by the end of the book I realized this was probably Oliver's intention.

This is a story about sisters: how they love each other and resent each other all at the same time.  They're always competing, even if they don't realize it.  When Dara goes missing on her birthday, Nick begins a frantic chase to figure out where Dara disappeared to, leading to a surprising reveal.

After finishing this book, I thought, "Dang it.  Now I have to go back and read it again to see how I missed those clues."  I liked this one much better than Oliver's previous novel, Panic (see earlier blog post), although I think comparisons will be made to E. Lockhart's We Were Liars, which is similar.