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Tuesday, October 15, 2019

I Was Born for This by Alice Oseman


Pages: 393
Intended Audience: Teens
Genre: Contemporary
Notes for Parents: Contains course language and mature content

The Back Cover
For Angel, life is about one thing: The Ark—a pop-rock trio of teenage boys taking the world by storm. Being part of The Ark’s fandom has given her everything she loves—her friend Juliet, her dreams, her place in the world.
Jimmy owes everything to The Ark. He’s their frontman—and playing in a band with his mates is all he ever dreamed of doing.
But dreams don’t always turn out the way you think, and when Jimmy and Angel are unexpectedly thrust together they find out how strange and surprising facing up to reality can be.

What the cover doesn’t tell you:
This was a Goodreads Choice Award Nominee for Young Adult Fiction in 2018.

What’s good?
Angel’s obsession with a boy band leads her to London where she stays with a friend Juliet and together they plan a week of activities around The Ark. Things, however, don’t go exactly as planned. The plot is simple but the story is multifaceted. There are many themes, including love v. obsession, public persona v. private life, meeting your heroes, religion, identity, mental health, healthy relationships, and so much more. The narrative stays light despite the many heavy subjects, but it gets serious when it needs to. The pace is good and the characters are diverse. The story is fun and engaging.
Best Part: Jimmy’s grandfather.

What isn’t good?
Some of the British colloquialism can be confusing, but there’s nothing too perplexing.
Worst part: Nothing was terrible.

Recommendation ☺☺☺☺ (4/5)
This is not a love story. Rather it’s a coming-of-age journey for a group of young people who come together in an unexpected way to learn about themselves and each other. In the end, the lesson is that people are complicated and we need to learn how to care about ourselves before we can truly care about each other. Recommended.

Oseman, Alice. I Was Born for This. New York: HarperCollins, 2018.

Sunday, October 13, 2019

City of Saints and Thieves by Natalie C. Anderson


Pages: 401
Intended Audience: Mature Teens
Genre: Contemporary / Crime mystery
Notes for Parents: Contains violence, illegal activities, and descriptions of mature scenes.

The Back Cover
After fleeing the Congo as refugees, Tina and her mother arrive in Kenya hoping for a better life. They can’t believe their luck when Tina’s mother finds work as a maid for the Greyhills, one of the city’s most illustrious families. But there’s a dark secret lurking behind the family’s immense fortune, and when Tina discovers her mother shot dead in Mr. Greyhill’s private study, she knows he pulled the trigger. And she’ll do whatever it takes to prove it.
But there’s more to the murder than meets the eye, including harrowing secrets from Tina’s past that will change everything she thought she knew and reveal the painful truth behind her mother’s death.

What the cover doesn’t tell you:
The story begins five years after Tina’s mother’s death, as she puts her plan for revenge into action.

What’s good?
Tina has spent years planning how to ruin the life of the man responsible for her mother’s death. It should have been cut and dry, but a chance encounter with a childhood friend complicates everything. The plot is sophisticated and engaging. What begins as simple revenge develops into a complex mystery that involves gangs, warlords, illegal gold, and her mother’s hidden past. The female lead is strong, the setting is gritty and full of danger, and the overall tone remains tense throughout.
Best Part: As she tells the story, Tina shares the rules of being a good thief.

What isn’t good?
The pace is uneven, unfolding slowly with only the occasional burst of action. The mystery of who killed Tina’s mother is predictable when it comes to who didn’t do it. The ending is tidy, but maybe too tidy.
Worst part: The romance, although limited, was still unnecessary.

Recommendation ☺☺☺ (4/5)
Set in the unforgiving streets of Kenya, this story is a different kind of contemporary thriller. The main character is an orphan, a thief, and a survivor, risking everything to avenge her mother’s death. The story is intense, albeit a bit slow, but worth the read. Recommended.

Anderson, Natalie C., City of Saints & Thieves. New York: Speak, 2017.

Saturday, October 5, 2019

A Semi-Definitive List of Worst Nightmares by Krystal Sutherland


Pages: 349
Intended Audience: Teens
Genre: Contemporary
Notes for Parents: Contains coarse language, underaged drinking, and some mature scenes.

The Back Cover
Esther’s family is riddled with fear. Her father is agoraphobic and hasn’t left the basement in six years. Her twin brother cannot be in the dark. Her mother is terrified of bad luck. According to the family curses, they are destined to die from the very things they fear most.
Esther doesn’t know what her great fear is yet (nor does she want to). So she avoids nearly everything, keeping close track of every phobia in her semi-definitive list of worst nightmares.
Then Esther is pickpocketed by Jonah Smallwood, an old elementary school classmate. Along with her phone, money and a fruit roll-up she’d been saving, Jonah also steals her list. And so begins Esther’s ultimate challenge—to work her way through the list, tackling one fear at a time.
Including one that Esther hadn’t even considered: love.

What the cover doesn’t tell you:
There’s a bit of a possible paranormal element to this story—maybe.

What’s good?
Esther Solar is facing her fears with the help of Jonah Smallwood. With macabre humor and sarcastic dialogue, checking fears off her semi-definitive list becomes an adventure. Esther and Jonah are strong characters, and well-supported by Esther’s twin Eugene, who needs a constant source of light, and her friend Hephzibah, who has selective mutism. The plot is simple and perhaps a little predictable, but the pace moves steadily making it a fast read. The story touches on phobias, anxiety, depression, self-harm, suicide, abuse, addiction, and more. And there’s even a hint of the supernatural, and a kitten.
Best Part: Lobster Shakespeare (pg. 73)

What isn’t good?
The Solar family was a bit over-the-top. To call them quirky feels like a bit of an understatement. As a result, the story felt a bit…theatrical. It also creates a confusing tone that changes from solemn to comical in the same scene. The end was satisfying but a little sappy.
Worst part: Nothing was terrible.

Recommendation ☺☺☺ (4/5)
It was that soft, supernatural element that won me over. Without it, this would have been just a weird story about family in desperate need of therapy. But it was heartwarming, and funny, and a little bit sad without being too serious or too flippant about the serious parts. I enjoyed it. Recommended.

Sutherland, Krystal. A Semi-Definitive List of Worst Nightmares. New York: Speak, 2017.