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Category Archives: Young Adult

Diverse debut

Meredith Russo was recently interviewed by School Library Journal on diversity with her debut book If I Was Your Girl, which came at an awesome time as I’d just finished the book last week. Within the week, also making sure I returned it to the public library after booktalking it to a group of other librarians at a book club and adding multiple copies to our next order for the school library.

IfIWasYourGirlThe premise is that Amanda is going to live with her father after a beating in a mall bathroom in the town where she currently lives with her mother. Thinking that Amanda can start fresh in a new place, the obstacles of truly being accepted by her father and then being a girl in a new school are enough to wreck her nerves. But, things are settling in well and Grant, a kind-hearted boy, has already taken an interest in her. And while she wants to tell Grant about her being born a boy, his insistence that he’s not interested in any “secret” puts Amanda at ease. For the first time, allowing herself to truly enjoy being herself, though she has told another girl she befriended at school.

It’s a strategically told story with a crisp voice that is neither too flowery nor too pointed. There is a comfort in Russo’s storytelling that allows for a bit of complacency before another traumatic event unfolds, sending chaos into Amanda’s life yet again. It’s the characters, from Amanda and Grant to her father that explore the emotions of a trans experience. I think it’s a cut above others in its categorization, serving a more rounded understanding of transitioning still feeling guarded, a necessary measure to protect oneself. It explores religion and homophobia, secret-keeping, and family.

It’s got a provocative title and cover that compliment each other, which is where I always start with a book. Then add to it an author’s note about Russo’s own experience and it’s a book needing to be on everyone’s shelf to read and then share widely.

 
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Posted by on June 5, 2016 in Authors, Fiction, Young Adult

 

“The Greatest”

With the passing of a legend, both in sports and in life, I would be remiss not to remind everyone to revisit his greatness in the Charles R. Smith book illustrated by Bryan Collier called Twelve Rounds to Glory: The Story of Muhammad Ali published in 2007. There’s a reason that it remains on our high school summer reading list with multiple copies sitting on our shelf: it’s the interest, the history, the personality, and the unbelievable understanding of who Ali was in a mere 80 pages.

What I loved about it then and continue to love about it now is how it captures Ali’s essence. It’s like watching director Baz Luhrmann re-create Romeo + Juliet for a contemporary audience, yet you’re still hearing Shakespeare’s lines and get it. Smith uses Ali’s prophetic lyricism and skillful word play to deliver punch after punch to the world and his opponents. Combine this with Collier’s skillful renditions of famous fights and it’s a knockout. Readers learn the chronology of his life and his impact during the Vietnam era. This is a bonus to learning about his athletic prowess, being delivered by Ali’s own words. Those who have seen and heard the clips or are old enough to have watched him during his illustrious career can hear his words spoken as they read them on the page.

If you haven’t picked up this book, you must.

 

Pop Shakespeare

After having just read and posted about Exit, Pursued by a Bear and now just finishing after an obsessive day of reading Dreamers Often Lie by Jacqueline West, I am elated by the resurgence of Shakespeare-inspired YA fiction.

For this story, there is no doubt that Shakespeare seeps from the pages from the title to the incorporation of a main character who acts: you’d be hard-pressed to find an actor who hasn’t played a character in one of his plays. Jaye is now in high school and playing Titania in A Midsummer Night’s Dream opposite her childhood friend, Pierce, who has been distant over the last few years, but is taking up acting in his senior year. Yet Jaye’s life has been rocked by a brain injury during a skiing accident with her mother and sister. Not only does she want to leave the hospital to get back to the play and her friends, she’s feigning good-health when instead she’s seeing and hearing Shakespeare characters including the bard himself, Hamlet, and Romeo. Romeo turns out to be the new kid in town and a love interest for Jaye, while also epitomizing the possible bad decisions that Jaye has continuously made and that had disappointed her father before his untimely death. Insert the love triangle as Pierce becomes overprotective of the healing Jaye.

There is much to discover within the pages, from lines from the plays to Jaye’s family dynamics, healing from a brain injury, and healthy decision-making. The writing and pacing engage readers from start to finish with a seamless incorporation of the hallucinated characters. So once readers tune in to Jaye’s new normal, the book is easy to follow. It’s not about mental illness and it’s not true magic, it’s simply her brain’s reaction to the trauma. And she certainly doesn’t want to admit it to anyone either.

With the amount of drama between the pages, it doesn’t have to be a “literary” teen who will enjoy it because it’s contemporary realism with a pinch of canon. But you better be ready to hear from them once they turn the final pages. It wouldn’t be true Shakespeare without it.

 
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Posted by on May 31, 2016 in Authors, Fiction, Young Adult

 

Strength and sports

ExitPursued

A buzzed-about book released in March, I was elated when it finally arrived in the library. It starts with the beauty of the back-lit cover of a cheerleader in flight and the title: Exit, Pursued by a Bear and ends with the significance of a story about a protagonist sexually assaulted. There are plenty of YA books that discuss sexual assault and their beauty is in the range of reactions and secondary characters that the writers incorporate to paint a picture where teen readers can learn, understand, empathize, and be educated in how to prevent, deal with, or help when conversations turn to rape.

Hermione’s reaction is off-putting to many in her school, on her squad, and even her therapist because she responds with strength and the resolution to keep moving forward. Their reaction to her is that she is not “dealing with” the rape if she has returned to school and her squad, even when the rapist has not been caught. It’s everyone’s response to her response that makes this book poignant. There’s also a deep appreciation for Hermione’s relationship with her best friend, Polly. Polly is there to say the word rape, Polly is there to stand by her friend and tell her that it’s okay to cry. It’s not another boy who is there to save the day or fall in love with her to lift her up, but a friend. Add to this that Johnston includes decisions regarding the option of an abortion and you have a well-rounded picture of the range of experiences, decisions, and emotions that victims of rape endure.

There are certainly situations that I take issue with including an over-reliance on her friend Polly to help in decisions more suited for Hermione’s parents or the resolution of the story itself, but it does not detract from the book’s message: you can be who you are, have a terrible thing happen to you, and still have the freedom to be who you are. Yes, experiences can change you or your worldview, but they don’t always have to. Stop thinking about what everyone else thinks you should be doing. It’s a powerful message for teens who are continually discovering who they are and what they’re made of while also still addressing important topics regarding safety and sex.

 
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Posted by on May 22, 2016 in Authors, Young Adult

 

Don’t “Look Past” Devine’s latest

Having been afforded the opportunity through Netgalley to read Eric Devine’s newest title that will debut this fall, I’m hopeful that the tide is turning on GLBTQ titles: instead of it being the sPrintole focus of the story with a weak storyline for the sake of having a GLBTQ character, newer fiction is going deeper. The stories are mysteries and fantasy and science fiction with characters that are GLBTQ. And that’s exactly what you get in Look Past.

Avery is used to sideways glances and cutting comments, but he is past it affecting him. He has positive relationships and kind friendships, but in the opening scene, Avery is in the woods, linked arm-in-arm with others from the community searching for his friend Mary. Mary is missing and while no one wants to think “presumed dead”, that’s exactly what happens when her body is discovered.

Now Avery’s mission is to solve the crime, especially now that he’s been pulled in and his love for Mary propel him to push through the animosity and hatred. He’s willing to put himself in harm’s way and this keeps us up at night.

Chills and thrills. Religion. Hopefulness? And we pause and hold our breath when Avery is patted down. Angered, frustrated. We know. They know. It’s moments like this that make Devine’s book thoughtful, rich, and empathetic. I can’t wait to share this widely– it is not a niche book, not by a long shot.

 
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Posted by on May 19, 2016 in Authors, Fiction, Young Adult

 

Logical read

The younger brother book to Nicola Yoon’s Everything, Everything, Highly Illogical Behavior by John Corey Whaley is endearing and fascinating. A snapshot of Solomon’s life living withHighlyIllogicalBehavior agoraphobia, Whaley  focuses as much on Solomon’s life functioning indoors after an anxiety attack pushed him over the end and he became “that kid” who took off most of his clothes and went into the school’s water fountain. The debilitating mental illness keeps him inside, going to school online and entertaining himself with books and Star Trek. His parents are in tact. And now he is befriended by a former classmate, Lisa, who has an ulterior motive along with befriending Solomon.

The realistic conversations both spoken and unspoken by Solomon and Lisa along with Lisa’s boyfriend Clark, Solomon’s parents, and grandmother lend itself to an authentic exploration of agoraphobia and anxiety disorders. Solomon is content having not left the house in three years. He also realizes that he’s gay– this discovery is neither life-altering or unexpected– rather just another layer to the story. It’s juxtaposed by the insistence by all of Lisa’s friends that her boyfriend, Clark, is gay.

Readers explore the world as Solomon sees it, how his parents are reacting to it, and the friendship forged by Lisa and Clark with him. Each character has a strong voice, all with a vested interest in Solomon’s health and well-being. This can be added to the growing body of YA literature that focuses on mental health and mental illness and does it well.

 
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Posted by on April 28, 2016 in Authors, Fiction, Young Adult

 

Hopefulness

It remained true. With my previous post and insistence that King’s quote would hold true, Schlitz’s The Hired Girl was a book that didn’t give up all its secrets at one. The reader’s relationship with Janet nee Joan is like meeting a new best friend– one that was instant but is appreciated more with each passing day. Even Malka, the servant who is part of the Rosenbach’s family since she raised the elder Rosenbach since he was a child, is endeared to Janet and her hard-working attitude and need to please.

Janet must escape the dead-end work that will eventually kill her and her spirit at Steeple Farm. Her father has lost his wife and Janet has lost her mother. She is now the woman of the house, keeping it, cleaning it while cooking for the men, her father and brothers, without any respect, praise, or money for a new dress. And now the last straw, as her father will not allow her to attend school and left her idol, Miss Chandler, unwelcome in their home. Janet thought she’d be able to show her father her worth, but instead, he burns the few books that she had. Janet is now resolute. She will leave and never return. And leave she does.

Now she is a hired girl in the Rosenbach’s house, a Jewish home, when Janet is a Gentile. It’s an education for Janet as to how to keep a house for a Jewish family in the early 1900s but it’s also a chance for Janet to blossom. It’s her trials and tribulations and the reader’s want and need to see Janet succeed that push the book forward. There’s a beauty in Janet’s simplicity and a complexity to the characters that she interacts with.

In the vein of Jennifer Donnelly’s A Northern Light, this historical novel demonstrates the power of education and perseverance.  And while it will likely be best appreciated by adults, teens regardless of the distance of time, will fight for Janet as she fights for herself.

 
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Posted by on April 25, 2016 in Adult, Authors, Fiction, Young Adult

 

Going slow

 

Every so often, I’m reminded of the above quote when I find myself moving slowly through a book. Now, not slowly as in ugh, do I really have to pick this book up again? Or, why do people like this book? Instead, it’s because I just don’t want the book to have to be over. I’m enjoying getting to know the characters and reading the author’s words. The latter is how I’m feeling right now about Schlitz’s The Hired Girl. I’m only about a third of the way through it, but it feels indulgent and rich and full of promise.

So, I’m going to heed King’s words and go slow because I know this book won’t give up all its secrets at once.

 
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Posted by on April 20, 2016 in Adult, Authors, Fiction, Young Adult

 

Pure magic

I first got to know April Genevieve Tucholke just a few weeks ago when I read her curated collection of short stories Slasher Girls & Monster Boys. Loved. And now to pick up her book that’s getting some buzz was wonderful. And then I read the first page and was introduced to Poppy “She was the girl next door who fell off her bike and laughed at her bloody knees. She was the neighborhood hero who organized games of Burn the Witch and got everyone to play. She was the high school queen who reached forward one day during math class, grabbed Holly Trueblood’s thick, white-blond hair in her fist, and cut it off at the skull while Holly screamed and screamed. All because someone said Holly’s hair was prettier than her own.”WinkPoppyMidnight

And I thought, yup, this is my kind of book. And then I read more and I thought, this is The Virgin Suicides by Eugenides meets Nothing by Teller and I was hooked. The dark mood set the pace as readers got to know Poppy and Wink and Midnight. Poppy is an only child, self-centered and evil while Wink is free spirited and innocent. Midnight is the boy caught in the middle. He’s been wrapped around Poppy’s finger, a pawn in her chess match, but moving closer to Wink gives him the ability to be softer and more worldly. Wink talks in fairy tales and tarot cards and Poppy talks in meanness and sex.

Some of the characterizations are stereotypical, but when Tucholke incorporates a magical thread pulling the story toward its climax– readers are shocked, scared, but satisfied. These three characters are worth knowing and learning from. Their trauma is our trauma, their failure is our failure. From the beautifully scattered cover art, unorthodox character names and situations, to the symbolic use of white stags and red fruit, it’s not an everyone book, but those that do read and love will do so with fervor.

 
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Posted by on March 30, 2016 in Authors, Fiction, Young Adult

 

Check them out

ReadingOwlAs I mentioned in a previous post, I’m contributing to a blog for the American Library Association’s Young Adult Library Services arm. Here are the past few posts: