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A SOLITARY BLUE

This is the story of Jeff Greene, the guitar-playing high school boy Dicey Tillerman meets in Dicey's Song (1982)—but the connection isn't made until near the end. The story begins, matter-of-factly but with Kramer vs. Kramer pathos, when Jeff at seven finds his mother Melody's note explaining that she loves him but had to leave him to help the world's less fortunate and "make things better." Jeff is left with his stiff, expressionless father, "The Professor," who withdraws to his study (while Jeff, that first night, gets dinner) and appears unaware of his son—doing poorly at school, friendless, and a few years later, ill with pneumonia and an overlooked 104° fever. (This event shocks the father into a first, abstracted look.) The summer Jeff turns 12, his mother invites him to stay with her at her grandmother's house in Charleston; and though he doesn't see much of her he is overcome with love—cherishing her memory through the year, writing monthly unanswered letters, and buying a cheap used guitar because she had played one. There is a touching scene on Christmas when his father, who has grown a shade more attentive—thanks partly to the admonishment of his new friend Brother Thomas—presents Jeff with a superior guitar. Jeff must go to his father's study and convince him that it is just what he would have chosen. ("I'm sorry. I don't mean to be—emotional at you—I just—I just like it so much," says Jeff; and his father answers, "Thank you for taking the trouble to make that clear.") The next summer Jeff returns to Charleston, but sees even less of his mother—she is off on long trips with her dreadful boyfriend—and goes home dangerously withdrawn. The healing process begins several months later with a move from Baltimore to a Chesapeake Bay cabin he and his father choose together. Jeff does well at his new school, makes some friends, meets Dicey, and hangs out with the Tillermans—and he and his father, still reserved, become closer and easier with each other. Melody will visit twice, in a devious play for the inheritance her grandmother has left to Jeff, but by now he has hardened; the second time he is able to feel sorry for her. Later Jeff resolves his mixed heritage by deciding to go into ecology: "No, not saving the world or getting back to the good old prehistoric days, not that," he tells his father. "But responsible management of it, somehow. . . with computers too. . . ." This doubly simplistic resolution is disappointing, and Voigt's lack of sympathy for Melody's postulated type is a problem from the start. However, Jeff's own feelings at every stage are compellingly real and affecting; the growing closeness between him and his father is moving and subtly developed; and his own emotional development and growing character (that old-fashioned term is the only word for it) brings out Voigt at her best, as well.

Pub Date: Sept. 9, 1983

ISBN: 0689863608

Page Count: 359

Publisher: Atheneum

Review Posted Online: Oct. 27, 2011

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 1, 1983

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THE FOREST GRIMM

A satisfying story that pays homage to the dark narrative arcs of traditional fairy tales.

A prediction of untimely death was not what Clara Thurn expected when Grandmère read her fortune.

Clara could hardly wait for her 16th birthday and the coming-of-age rite in which she would make a secret wish on the Sortes Fortunae, or Book of Fortunes, just like every person in Grimm’s Hollow. But when she was 14, someone used their wish to commit murder, the Book of Fortunes went missing, and a curse now plagues the village. Clara’s mother was among the 67 Lost Ones who have since disappeared in the forest. Now there’s a lottery: The chosen person must enter the forest in search of the Lost and the Sortes Fortunae. Clara, 17, desperately hopes to be chosen in the lottery so she can save her mother. But instead, 19-year-old Axel Furst, whose fiancee became Lost, is selected. Clara, who has created a map of the forest based on information from those who entered it before the curse, takes off in pursuit of her friend. Clara is a strong and capable protagonist who has lost both her parents and is in chronic pain from scoliosis. Clara and Axel’s journey is an original and enjoyable take on Western European fairy tales. The characters’ rich and detailed backstories and the ominous, atmospheric prose are slightly let down by the pacing and conclusion, but this will not diminish readers’ overall enjoyment. Characters read white.

A satisfying story that pays homage to the dark narrative arcs of traditional fairy tales. (Fantasy. 13-18)

Pub Date: Sept. 19, 2023

ISBN: 9781250873002

Page Count: 352

Publisher: Wednesday Books

Review Posted Online: July 26, 2023

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 15, 2023

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IMPOSTER SYNDROME AND OTHER CONFESSIONS OF ALEJANDRA KIM

A satisfyingly accurate account of zealotry and personal growth.

A Manhattan private school senior caught between cultures navigates microaggressions while grieving the death of her father.

Alejandra Kim, daughter of second-generation Korean Argentines, feels like she fits in nowhere. She’s uncomfortable at elite Anne Austere Prep, a progressive school where she’s surrounded by wealthy classmates who are clueless about her life as a scholarship student. But with her Korean face and Spanish name, she doesn’t fit in in her ethnically diverse neighborhood of Jackson Heights either. Worse still, Papi, the parent she felt really understood her, died eight months ago, leaving her alone with critical, perpetually exhausted Ma. Ale just wants to get through this year and attend her dream liberal arts college in Maine with her White best friend, Laurel. But her life turns upside down when aggressively, self-righteously activist Laurel—without Ale’s approval—starts a petition against a teacher who insinuated that Ale’s heritage made her a shoo-in for college. Ale must figure out and stand up for what she believes in. Weighty topics such as appropriation, passing, privilege, and inclusivity are seamlessly addressed in this entertaining, well-paced story. The characterization, both of main characters and of the supporting cast members, is well-rounded and spot-on, and Ale is a thoroughly appealing protagonist, managing to be wry and vulnerable at once. This skillful depiction of a common sort of subtle, pervasive, and multilayered racism and classism rings true.

A satisfyingly accurate account of zealotry and personal growth. (Fiction. 13-18)

Pub Date: Feb. 21, 2023

ISBN: 978-0-593-56337-3

Page Count: 304

Publisher: Crown

Review Posted Online: Nov. 15, 2022

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Dec. 1, 2022

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