Tuesday, December 15, 2015

Salt to the Sea, by Ruta Sepetys

In 1945, the German passenger ship Wilhelm Gustloff was targeted by Russian torpedoes, resulting in the deaths of thousands.  It's not a well-known story from WWII, but Ruta Sepetys made a name for herself in the previous novel Between Shades of Gray by exploring those stories that need to be told.  Needless to say, one doesn't open this book expecting a happy ending; we all know what's going to happen.  But we don't know who will survive or who will perish, and because Sepetys is so skilled at making us invested in her characters, you'll find yourself desperately flipping the final pages of the book to find out what happens.

Salt to the Sea begins with a road trip on foot.  A group of ragtag refugees is journeying in the cold to the sea, hoping to find passage out of western Germany before Russia overtakes them.  Sepetys switches between four perspectives: Florian, a German soldier on the run, harboring a secret; Joana, a nurse from Lithuania; Emilia, an unmarried, pregnant Polish girl; and Alfred, a young Nazi sailor working the Wilhelm Gustloff.

I will admit that it took me a while to warm up to this novel.  I personally am not a fan of novels that employ multiple narrators, and Sepetys keeps each chapter incredibly short.  At the beginning of the book, I found this to be irritating.  It's hard to form connections with the characters when we aren't given much time to invest in them.  However, patient readers will be rewarded, as Septetys slowly pulls back the layers on each character.  Everyone has secrets, and everyone is more complicated than they initially let on.

I suppose Salt to the Sea could be seen as a companion book to Between Shades of Gray - Joana is cousin to Gray's Lina - but it stands on its own.  Another success for Ruta Sepetys.

Tuesday, October 27, 2015

Need by Joelle Charbonneau

High school teenagers begin getting invitations to join a social network site.  They have to, in turn, invite five other friends to join.  When they do, the site - NEED - will fulfill a request, seemingly free of charge ("What do you NEED?").  Of course, nothing is ever really free, and soon NEED members are being asked to perform small tasks in exchange for something they request.  But when the tasks get more dangerous and begin to have real consequences, the teens must begin to question their ethics and sense of right and wrong.  Are those concert tickets really worth it?  How far would you be willing to go?

I liked the premise of this book.  In today's social media age, it's not so far-fetched to imagine a scenario like this in real life.  What ultimately turned me off from this book was the explanation at the end of who/what was behind NEED.  I won't spoil it here, but I didn't buy it.  If this book was more dystopian/science fiction, then maybe.  But this is firmly realistic mystery fiction and I didn't believe the "big reveal."  Too bad, because this one had potential.

Wednesday, October 7, 2015

This is Where it Ends, by Marieke Nijkamp

Where to begin with this book?  I'm writing this review as the flags fly half-staff for the school shootings in Oregon.  Reading This is Where it Ends was obviously highly unsettling and uncomfortable.  We all know this story.  We know this story because it keeps appearing on the news.  It's happened before and sadly, will probably keep happening again.  I realize author Marieke Nijkamp didn't write this book hoping for something like Oregon to happen to give her story a sense of urgency.  Still, the timing will make this title fly off the shelves.

This is Where it Ends begins on an ordinary morning in Opportunity, Alabama.  The author uses multiple narrators who are all in different locations around the school: Autumn, a ballerina, and her girlfriend, Sylvia, are in the school auditorium for morning assembly.  Sylvia's brother, Tomás, and his friend Fareed, are using the fact that the entire school staff is at the assembly to break into the principal's office.  Claire has track practice and isn't at assembly either, although her brother Matt is.

Nijkamp switches between these characters, their perspectives interspersed with social media posts and text messages from other individuals inside and outside of the school.  The five main characters in particular are all connected by a relationship to Tyler, Autumn's brother.  When Tyler locks the students and staff in the auditorium and begins shooting, the scenario becomes all too real. 

The story unfolds over less than an hour's time, but somehow it feels longer.  I understand why the author would want to tell this story from multiple points of view.  After all, when something like this happens in real life, the news and social media seems quick to point fingers at who's to blame.  How could no one see this coming? How did no one stop it before it got too far?  The reality, of course, is that there are no easy answers.

Here's the thing.  I didn't really like this book very much.  It wasn't the violence, although that was certainly upsetting.  I just found parts of it to be highly unbelievable.  Tyler begins shooting at 10:05 a.m.  The police and SWAT team don't arrive on scene until about 30 minutes later.  REALLY???? When the school shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary occurred, police were on scene four minutes after the 911 call.  I do not believe that it would take police half an hour to respond to a school emergency. 

Secondly, when the book opens, Tomás and Fareed are able to break into the principal's office because the entire faculty and staff is at the principal's assembly.  ON WHAT PLANET is the front office of a school left sitting empty for someone to just waltz in? 

Finally, near the end, three characters escape from the auditorium.  However, for reasons that are murky and incomprehensible, they don't run outside. They think that the only means of escape is to go upstairs to a classroom that has a window leading onto the roof.  I didn't understand this either.  Despite the fact that dozens of students have managed to slip away from the auditorium before them, why did this group feel like they had to make this choice? 

Such glaring issues keep me from fully recommending this title.  Jennifer Brown's Hate List and Jodi Picoult's Nineteen Minutes have already addressed this topic.  I don't feel that This is Where it Ends brings much more to the table, other than having a cast of diverse characters.  I am all for diversity in YA lit, by the way.  But it has to feel natural to the story and the setting.  I felt like the author was trying a little too hard to check off all the diversity boxes.

Friday, October 2, 2015

Everything, Everything by Nicola Yoon

 I can't think of too many books this year that have been met with as much advanced buzz as Everything, Everything, the debut from Nicola Yoon.  Ever since the wild success of The Fault in our Stars back in 2012, publishers and audiences have been clamoring for the next romance with a "hook," which this title delivers: 18-year-old Madeline lives a life of solitude.  She's never been to school, never learned to drive, never taken a vacation.  Maddie suffers from Severe Combined Immunodeficiency, also known as "bubble boy disease."  Because any small element outside of her sterilized environment could trigger a massive attack or illness, she spends all her time indoors with her mother and her nurse. 
Maddie spends lots of time looking out her window at the house next door, eventually catching the attention of her cute neighbor, Ollie.  He writes his email address on the window pane, and soon the two begin emailing and instant messaging.  When that doesn't become enough, Maddie's nurse, Carla, begins sneaking Ollie inside the house (after going through decontamination) for short visits in person.

One thing I liked about Everything, Everything is the format; it's not just straight prose, but includes diary entries, IM chat transcripts, sketches, and so forth.  It makes for a very quick, accessible read.  Madeline and Ollie are both sweet, likeable characters, even though you know their relationship will only spell trouble in the end.  My biggest complaint, however, was the unlikely "twist" at the end.  It defied credulity and was something of a let down for me.  The ending felt rushed and a little too tidy.  Nevertheless, this title should find a big audience with teens.


Tuesday, September 29, 2015

The Great American Whatever, by Tim Federle

The Great American Whatever marks author Tim Federle's debut in YA fiction.  Federle is also the author of the middle grade novels Better Nate Than Ever and Five, Six, Seven, Nate!.  (He's also written cocktail books for adults, one of which is called Tequila Mockingbird which wins for best punny title).  In his few published works thus far, Federle writes what he knows.  In the Nate books, he used his own experiences on Broadway to write about a boy who wants to make in on the Big White Way.  In this newest work, we follow the journey of seventeen-year-old Quinn, a closeted movie buff from Pittsburgh (Federle's home town).  I give this little bit of backstory because as much as I wanted to embrace The Great American Whatever, it felt a little distant for me.  I never found Quinn's voice to be fully authentic.  It sounded too much like adult-Tim in the guise of a teenager.  (In the acknowledgements at the end, Federle says that the book was initially written with the characters about ten years older.)

The Great American Whatever follows the first summer Quinn spends without his sister, Annabeth, who died in a texting-related car crash six months earlier.  Quinn and Annabeth were a filmmaking team; he wrote the screenplays and his sister directed.  Without her, Quinn feels desperately empty and lost.  He also feels responsible for the wreck that took her life, since he was the one she was texting.  Slowly, Quinn crawls out of his grief thanks to his best friend, Geoff, and a cute older boy he meets at a college party.  Peppered throughout the novel are sample screenplay directions, as Quinn imagines his life the way a filmmaker would:

EXT. GEOFF'S PERFECT LAWN - NIGHT

Quinn takes Geoff by the lapels and flings him onto the lawn.  He straddles Geoff and digs his knee right between Geoff's ribs.


QUINN

Seriously.  Explain yourself so that I don't freak out.

Again, as much as I wanted to really love this book, it was only ok for me.  I think Federle needs a little more time to really find his voice in YA fiction.  This is a perfectly solid debut for older teens, but similar themes have been done explored elsewhere and with greater resonance in YA lit.

Wednesday, May 13, 2015

Dumplin' by Julie Murphy

After finishing Dumplin', I felt like my normally nonexistent Texas accent was just a little stronger.  I might have started droppin' some gs from the ends of words and speakin' just a little more slowly.   From the nuances of small-town Texas life, to our obnoxious Homecoming traditions of mums so big they're liable to swallow you whole, to the unspoken serenity that comes with settlin' down on a hot day with a large glass of iced tea, author Julie Murphy gets it right.  She also gets right the creation of her main character, the overweight Willowdean Dickson, whose outward confidence masks deep insecurities. 

Willowdean is a Dolly Parton-loving high schooler, still reeling a year later from the death of her beloved aunt.  Her mother heads up the annual Texas Blue Bonnet Beauty Pageant, something Willowdean has always stayed as far away from as possible.  However, hurt that her mother has never once suggested that Willowdean might consider entering the pageant, she decides on a whim to enter.  What she doesn't expect is for her best friend and three other girls (who all suffer ridicule from their classmates for various reasons) to sign up as well.

Let me just say here y'all: I love to hate me some beauty pageants.  I think they are, really, The Worst.  But I would LOVE for a girl like Willowdean to show up just once, curves and all.  People throughout the book tell Willowdean that she's brave for entering the pageant.  "I don't want it to be brave," she says.  "I just want it to be normal."

Added to the mix are a couple of scenes where Willowdean and her oddball fellow contestants seek pageant tips from a local drag queen (a plot twist that is funny and sweet, but also a bit unrealistic.  I mean, out of the middle of west Texas is a gay bar that just happens to put on a Dolly Parton drag show?  Sure...). 

So much of Willowdean's journey was authentic and should resonate with teen readers.  Although mostly comfortable in her own skin, she still feels insecure about her body when it comes to boys and intimacy.  Even when presented with the chance to have it all with the boy she really likes, Willowdean nearly throws it all away because she can't imagine going to school every day and facing the other students.  Because no one would ever believe that a hot guy like that would possibly go for a girl like her, right?

Dumplin's a winner.  Toss your head back and throw your arms to the sky for this one.


Thursday, May 7, 2015

Another Day by David Levithan

I don't think I've been looking forward to a new release all year like I have been for Another Day, the long-awaited companion book to Levithan's Every Day from 2012.  I ADORED Every Day and I recommend it to students all the time.  Seriously, Levithan should send me flowers and gifts to thank me for all the kids out there that have gone out and purchased his book because I've talked about it so much.  Every Day is about 'A', a soul without a body.  A is genderless because every morning A wakes up and is in someone else's body.  It's a fabulous novel that asks us think about identity and how we define ourselves.  It also asks us to consider if we could ever learn to love someone whose face and gender changes every day.

Naturally, I was thrilled when I got the email from NetGalley: "Your request to view Another Day has been approved."  (*Insert Homer Simpson cheering noise here*)

Another Day is not a sequel, so fans wanting to know what happened to A at the end of Every Day will be disappointed.  Another Day retells the story, but this time from Rhiannon's point of view.  At first I wasn't sure if this was even necessary, and truthfully, I still have some doubts.  In Every Day, A falls in love with Rhiannon and manages to convince her that A's unique situation is true, and she in turn begins to fall in love with A.  I felt like a large chunk of Another Day offered little that was new, since we've read a lot of this before.  However, Rhiannon's point of view is unique because she has to struggle with her own ideas of love and relationships, even before she meets A.  Her doubts and insecurities are real and should ring true with teen readers. 

And yet, by the end of Another Day, we still don't know what's to come of A and Rhiannon, as the book ends pretty much exactly where Every Day does.  We'll have to keep waiting and wondering if they'll ever have a happy ending.

Tuesday, April 21, 2015

Red Queen, by Victoria Aveyard

I have to confess that I often judge a book by its cover.  Who doesn't love attractive jacket art?  I'm absolutely the kind of person who will pick up a book at the store if the cover art catches my eye.  And how great is the image to the left?  If you don't want to pick up the book based on that fantastic cover, then you must be blind.  That being said, if you know absolutely nothing about the book at all, you may be thinking you're getting ready to read an historical fiction tale; maybe something about "Bloody Mary" for example.

What you're going to get, however, is a fantasy/sci-fi/adventure story that presents very little that we haven't already seen.  The story opens with Mare Barrow, who lives in poverty with her parents and sister.  Her brothers are off fighting in war, and her sister is apprenticed as a seamstress.  Mare has no skills, so she spends her time picking pockets around town, dreading the day she will be "conscripted" to go the front lines of battle.  At least Aveyard didn't give her a bow and arrow to hunt food for family.  Mare just steals things outright. 

The world in which Mare lives is strictly divided into two castes: the Reds, like her, who are poor laborers and soldiers, and the Silvers, the elite ruling class.  But Silvers don't just merely have silver blood (literally), they also have X-Men like superpowers which keep the Reds in check.  One day Mare runs into Prince Cal, heir to the silver throne.  He takes a liking to Mare and arranges for her to have a job inside the palace, thus freeing her from having to go to war.  In a pivotal moment, Mare is serving the silvers during an exhibition: young women from across the land have come to prove their worth in order to become Cal's bride and future queen.  But this is no Cinderella-like ball.  The girls enter an arena and show off their powers and skills.  One such demonstration causes Mare to lose her balance and she falls into the arena.  Rather than be killed, however, an electrical jolt awakens something within her, and in front of everyone, she begins to produce lightning and electricity.

Because no Red has ever displayed powers before, the royal family quickly concocts a story to explain that she is a long-lost Silver princess, and they move her into the palace to keep a watch on her.

What follows is nothing new: Mare has to attend classes and training exercises.  She might as well be at Hogwarts, except without a wand.  She's also betrothed to Cal's younger brother, Maven.  Although she harbors some feelings for Cal, Mare and Maven begin to bond as she realizes they are both working in secret with a rogue group intent on taking down the royal family. 

I enjoyed a lot of this book, despite the fact that so much of it was familiar.  Towards the end I got a little tired of the fights and scheming and plots, and skimmed the last 100 pages or so to the end.  Naturally we will be set up for a sequel.  Give this one to students who have read Hunger Games and Divergent and still want more.

Monday, April 20, 2015

Saint Anything, by Sarah Dessen

There are some authors in the YA world who are like comfort food: mac and cheese, your favorite hot beverage, etc.  Or maybe in the case of Sarah Dessen, pizza and garlic knots.  (I wanted to eat ALL THE PIZZA after reading this book.  Nom nom nom).  That being said, just because I'm comparing Dessen to pizza doesn't mean her books per se are necessarily comforting.  Dessen always serves up YA lit that is both true and challenging.  Her characters experience real problems that aren't always resolved in a neat bow in the end.  I think this is probably what makes her novels still so popular in all the school libraries where I've worked. 

Saint Anything is a bit darker and grittier than some of her previous books.  We open on high schooler Sydney, whose family has been thrown in disarray after her brother, Peyton, has been sentenced to jail for drunk driving.  He hit a young man, causing the boy permanent paralysis.  Peyton's shadow hangs solidly over the prep school they both attended, and Sydney is in desperate need for a fresh start, so she transfers to the local public school where no one knows her family history.

Things are home aren't much better.  Her father is emotionally absent, not taking much of a role in anything.  Her mother, on the other hand, is living in supreme denial of Peyton's crime.  Her number one priority involves Peyton's phone calls from jail and keeping track of everything going on at his penitentiary.  At one point she even calls the warden over some trifle issue.  The way she goes on, one would think Peyton's at summer camp and not jail.  No one in the family shows any remorse or guilt over what happened to the victim of Peyton's crime.  No one - except Sydney.  She feels she must carry the burden of guilt because someone has to.

It was very difficult to get through parts of this book, emotionally.  The mother drove me CRAZY.  I wanted someone to shake some sense into her.  (Peyton does, eventually).  Dessen also introduces us to Ames, one of Peyton's friends who takes an unhealthy liking to Sydney.  He's creepy and uncomfortable.  The fact that Sydney's parents are so blind to his actions was infuriating.  I hope teens reading this book WILL TELL SOMEONE if they are put into a similar situation.  It was hard to believe that no adult did anything about Ames until the end of the novel.  Ugh.

Still, so much of Sydney's path to personal healing and reconciliation with her brother rings true.  She meets a group of students at school who embrace her and don't pass judgment on her family.  She slowly begins to fall in love for the first time.  She seeks advice from her friend Layla's mother, since her own mother is so emotionally absent.  She doesn't like talking on the phone to Peyton, until she discovers they both watch the same Real Housewives-esque reality show, and the ice begins to thaw between them.

I think Dessen tries a little too hard to wrap everything up neatly.  The ending felt a bit rushed and the conclusions forced.  Still, I have no doubt that this book will be snapped up by Dessen's fans, as it should be. 

Wednesday, April 1, 2015

5 to 1 by Holly Bodger

5 to 1, by Holly Bodger, is a book whose premise I enjoyed much more than its execution.  We're in India, far into the future.  A culture that previously put so much emphasis on having boys rather than girls has produced a population that cannot continue.  Girls are in short supply, and therefore are a prime commodity.  Because there are 5 boys born for every 1 girl, the state has set up a series of tests designed to match the best boy to every girl, with the hopes that their marriage and subsequent offspring will produce more girls.  The winners are assured a life of comfort and riches, while the losers are sent to "the wall."  (You know nothing, Jon Snow...).

The story begins with Sudasa, 17, beginning the preparations for the contest where she will select her husband after a series of tests.  The boys are not given names and are simply referred to by number.  The book switches back and forth between Sudasa's point of view, told in verse, and "5," told in first person narrative.

If this book reminds anyone of Kiera Cass's The Selection, you're not alone.  I liked the idea that it was boys competing for the hand of the girl instead of the other way around.  However, 5 to 1 reminded me not just of The Selection, but so so so many other YA titles, that I felt there was very little here that was new.  We've seen the idea of arranged marriages in Matched.  Women who are valued for the reproductive role in The Handmaid's Tale.  Being told that life outside "the wall" is bad and therefore you know the main character(s) will end up outside of it: The Giver, Delirium, Divergent, etc...

This book was such a short, fast read, I felt that the author did not give us time to flesh out the characters enough for us to care about them.  The end is not surprising or suspenseful, even though it's clear there will probably be another title to come. 

Additional purchase recommended only where The Selection is constantly checked out and students want something else to tide them over.

Review given in exchange for a digital ARC from NetGalley.

Tuesday, March 17, 2015

A Court of Thorns and Roses

I think it's safe to say that fairy tale retellings are certainly the 'in thing' right now.  As I write this review, Cinderella is at the top of the movie box office, and the Internet is all abuzz about the new live-action version of Beauty and the Beast set to begin filming with Emma Watson.  Teens who just can't wait until that film comes out, however, can spend many a happy hour with in the stacks of YA Lit devoted to fairy tales.  A Court of Thorns and Roses, the first in a new series by Sarah J. Maas, tackles the familiar Beauty and the Beast story but gives it a fresh spin.  It's a little bit Beauty and the Beast meets The Hunger Games meets Twilight.  I realize that sentence may be a big turnoff to many people, but don't let your biases get in the way. A Court of Thorns and Roses is exciting, sexy, violent, and sure to find an audience.

The story begins with 19-year-old Fayre hunting in the woods.  She lives with her father and two selfish sisters.  Once a wealthy family, their mother died and the father lost their fortune.  They now live in poverty in a small cottage, getting by on the meat and furs Fayre brings in thanks to her hunting skills.  One day she kills a large wolf, expecting to sell its fur in the market for a handsome price.  What she was not expecting was for a large beast to show up at their cottage, demanding Feyre come with him as payment for killing one of his soldiers.  It was no ordinary wolf she killed.  It - and the beast - are not just animals.  They are faeries, powerful creatures who once ruled the human lands.

In keeping with what we know of the Beauty and the Beast fairy tale, Fayre at first resents her captivity and has no interest in being friendly with the beast (named Tamlin).  Of course, the more she learns about the Fae and the curse that has been placed upon them, she begins to soften, eventually falling for the one who's taken her prisoner.  

Whereas the familiar fairy tale ends with Belle falling for the beast, he becomes a prince, and they live happily ever after, Maas's story gives our heroine a second act.  Fayre fails to declare her love for Tamlin aloud, and thus unwittingly condemns him into the hands of the one who cursed him, an evil woman named Amarantha.  When she realizes what she's done, Fayre goes to Amarantha's lair to try and save Tamlin.  She is given two options: solve Amarantha's riddle or undergo three dangerous and deadly trials.

A Court of Thorns and Roses is best suited for high school students, as it contains a few rather steamy sex scenes, as well as scenes of graphic violence.  Although there are additional entries in this series still to come, and there are still some questions left unanswered (what happened to Feyre's family?), I think this entry can stand alone as Maas does a good job at bringing the narrative to a conclusion.

Review given in exchange for an ARC from NetGalley.

Thursday, February 12, 2015

None of the Above, by I.W. Gregorio

It's senior year for Kristen Lattimer.  She's just been crowned Homecoming Queen and is looking at a track scholarship to college next year.  The night after the Homecoming dance, Kristen decides it's time to lose her virginity to her boyfriend Sam.  What should be a romantic night is ruined when she experiences terrible, agonizing pain.  This leads her to seek a gynecological exam.  The news is shocking: Kristen is intersex.

Although outwardly she looks like a girl, she has no uterus, and blood tests show that her chromosomes read XY.  Thus begins Kristen's painful journey of discovery: not only to learn more about her diagnosis, but to learn just what defines one's gender.
At first Kristen tells no one - not even Sam - about her diagnosis.  However, one drunken night, she spills the beans to her two best friends, Vee and Faith.  Soon the news is spread all over school, and the bullying begins, both at school and online.  Even her track coach says Kristen cannot participate with the track team because other schools have filed complaints about cheating.

The author of None of the Above, I.W. Gregorio, is herself a surgeon, and her medical knowledge comes through in the scenes with Kristen and her doctors.  I felt that these scenes, although factual, were a little too dry in their exposition.  It's quite obvious that Gregorio is trying to educate the reader by dispelling many rumors and myths about those who are intersex.  There are other plot points that seem a bit too pat, as if she was going through a check sheet of YA tropes: Homecoming queen? Check.  Happens to be reading Merchant of Venice is English class with its themes of gender identity?  Check.  Parent who is supportive but distant?  Check.

I like that this book explores an issue so rarely discussed in YA lit.  Gregorio is one of the founding members of the We Need Diverse Books campaign, so I applaud her efforts.  But I think it's obvious that Gregorio has a medical background and very few YA titles to her name.  Point more mature teen readers to Middlesex by Jeffrey Eugenides for additional reading on this theme.

Friday, January 16, 2015

Things We Know By Heart, by Jessi Kirby

In the opening moments of Things We Know By Heart, teenager Quinn wakes up to the distant sounds of sirens, and somehow she just knows they are for her boyfriend, Trent.  Skip ahead to over a year later, where Quinn is still deep in grief, not only over Trent's death, but over the future they will never have together.  A year later, and Quinn refuses to let herself move on or let go of Trent.  However, she writes donor letters to those people who received his organs, and she's heard back from all but one - the one who got Trent's heart.

Relentless and a bit obsessive, Quinn uses her best Internet sleuthing skills and figures out the recipient is a boy named Colton, about her age and living nearby.  Crossing all lines of acceptable behavior, Quinn goes to see him, intending to confront him, but she chickens out.  Instead, she befriends Colton and soon the two start spending more and more time together.  All the while, Quinn can't bring herself to tell Colton the truth.  Obviously, we as readers know everything will come out eventually, and it won't be pretty.

As YA romances go, I felt that Things We Know By Heart was pretty lightweight.  Colton is too much the Perfect Teenage Boyfriend.  He's cute, sensitive, outdoorsy... other than the fact that he still has to stop and take medication for his heart, Colton has few flaws.

There are many four star reviews for this book over on Goodreads, which completely baffles me.  It's hard for me to review books like this not from a grown-up point of view.  The adult in me just Really.Disliked.Quinn.  I know her boyfriend died tragically, and that's a sad thing.  But they weren't married.  They didn't have kids or a family together.  They were juniors in high school.  And although I'm sorry Quinn won't get to go to her prom with Trent or celebrate graduation with him, I just didn't feel very sympathetic toward her decision to just shut down and refuse to move on.  I think part of the problem is that we, as readers, don't get to know Trent as a character.  We just know a few fleeting details: he was an athlete, he once brought Quinn a huge sunflower.  I think if we had been invested more in their relationship, I would have cared about Quinn more. 

Colton, on the other hand, is the more interesting character, but Kirby makes this Quinn's story.  As Quinn begins to fall for Colton, she begins to heal emotionally and starts to move on with her life.

I'm sure there are plenty of teenage girls out there who will eat this up.  I think it would be an additional purchase for libraries, but not a necessary one.

Review given in exchange for an ARC from Edelweiss.  Book will be published in April.

Tuesday, January 6, 2015

Challenger Deep by Neal Shusterman

I started reading Challenger Deep with little idea of what the book was about.  As soon as I saw that an ARC was available of the newest Neal Shusterman title, I was all GIMMEGIMMEGIMME *makes grabby hand motions*

And then I plunged right in.  That being said, I was then thoroughly confused for the first part of the book.  We begin by following two storylines involving a boy named Caden.  In one, he is a normal high school boy who likes art and drawing.  In the other story, he is a crew member on board a pirate ship with a captain, a navigator, and a talking parrot.

What is happening?  I'm so lost!  But of course I stuck with it, and very slowly the pieces began to fall into place. You realize that it's Shusterman's intentions to throw you into this confusing narrative, because that's how jumbled it feels in Caden's head.  He begins to struggle in school and starts slipping away from his friends and family.  His parents finally realize he needs help that they cannot give him and Caden is checked into a psychiatric institution for teens.  It is heartbreaking.

However, through the fog of Caden's mind, the reader realizes the pirate ship scenario is Caden's way of trying to make sense of his illness and the people around him at the institution.  How far into the abyss will he go?

An author's note at the end tells us that Challenger Deep was inspired by the similar journey of his son, Brendan, who supplies the illustrations in the novel.  Such personal insight makes Caden's story feel authentic and we are pulled in tightly to his struggle.  I found this book to be a surprising change of pace for Shusterman, who mostly traffics in sci-fi and fantasy, but I loved it.  Shusterman never disappoints.

Review given in exchange for a digital ARC from Edelweiss.  Book will be published in April 2015.

Monday, January 5, 2015

Jackaby by William Ritter

I feel the need to state off the bat that I came into this book highly biased.  Jackaby has been touted by booksellers as "A cross between Sherlock and Doctor Who."  Now, anyone who's met me knows that I'm a freak for these shows.  My office is filled with Doctor Who things.  I have a sonic screwdriver.  (A student once asked me, "What is that?  A lightsaber?")  I have this cover from Entertainment Weekly up on my office wall.  I wore this t-shirt to school on Halloween. 
So, a book that's called a mash up of these two shows?  Um, yeah.  I'm all over it.

Jackaby is a paranormal mystery set in New England, 1892.  Abigail Rook arrives in town with no money, no job, and no husband, but with a healthy sense of adventure.  She answers an ad for "Investigated Services: Assistant Wanted."  The man who placed the ad is R.F. Jackaby, a private investigator who happens to be able to see spirits and inhuman creatures, and also wears a long, expensive coat and scarf.  Soon The Doctor and Clara Sherlock and Watson Jackaby and Abigail are investigating a string of grisly murders. 

For all the hype surrounding this book, I ultimately found Jackaby to be... fine.  I brought it home over Christmas break, and it sat on my coffee table for close to 2 weeks before I forced myself to finish it.  The "who done it" part of the mystery was not so hard to guess, although the paranormal aspect of it came out of slightly-left field.  Jackaby himself is certainly very Sherlock-ish.  He's an odd duck with a keen sense of observation that endears him few friends.  Abigail is given little to do other than to follow Jackaby around, although she has some skill at paying attention to details that eventually earns Jackaby's trust.

This book would be fine for middle school or high school, and at only 300 pages, is relatively short compared to many books coming out these days.  There's a good bit of odd humor (Jackaby's former assistant has been magically turned into a duck, for instance, thanks to a spell gone wrong), but I just wish it was more suspenseful.