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THE OPPOSITE OF MUSIC

In some ways, Young’s creatively constructed debut harks back to an earlier era, when problems often took precedence over people in YA novels. Billy is the narrator, a suburban Bostonian teenager whose artist father is showing signs of depression when the story opens. After Bill, Sr. responds negatively to medications prescribed by a psychiatrist, Billy’s mother decides to treat her husband at home, recruiting Billy to work with his father everyday after school. Young’s portrait of how the disease and its competing and often contradictory treatments (including electroconvulsive therapy) quickly consume the family is a strongly convincing element. Her combination of conversational scripts, monologues, free verse, fictional articles and traditional narrative will undoubtedly impress many readers. What’s missing here is the emotional life of Billy and the other family members as they try to cope with Bill Sr.’s devastating condition. The smart, music-loving teen’s statement that his father’s illness has given his life meaning seems tacked on to make up for this omission, especially since so little is known about Billy before his father got sick. What rings true is a lewdly funny scene in the school cafeteria ensues, and when the guilt-ridden son ditches his father to attend a concert with a friend. (Fiction. YA)

Pub Date: Feb. 27, 2007

ISBN: 1-4169-0040-3

Page Count: 352

Publisher: Atheneum

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 1, 2007

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THE ATLAS OF US

Gripping and authentic in the ways it portrays grief and shows how moving forward means having to let go.

After her father dies, a teen drops out of high school, loses her job, and embarks on a four-week journey through the California backcountry.

Everyone in the Bear Creek Community Service program is assigned a nickname as part of starting over with “a blank slate.” No one needs to know your past or whether you’re there by choice or court order. All that matters is the present: working on hiking trail maintenance. For Atlas James, or Maps, as she’s now known, it’s an escape from the poor decisions she’s made since her father’s death from cancer and a tribute to him. One of his dying wishes was to hike the Western Sierra Trail with her—the same one she’ll now be spending the summer working on with Books, Junior, Sugar, and King. Maps is immediately drawn to group leader King, and as secrets are revealed, the two act as magnets, attracting and repelling one another. Maps’ tangible grief is centered as she copes with the loss of the only person who understood her and always had her back. Gradually, as they clear brush, dig drainage, and battle the backcountry and their pasts, a sense of family is forged among the crew. The palpable romantic tension between King and Maps propels this beautifully written story. Junior is coded Black; other major characters read white.

Gripping and authentic in the ways it portrays grief and shows how moving forward means having to let go. (Fiction. 14-18)

Pub Date: Jan. 9, 2024

ISBN: 9780063088580

Page Count: 336

Publisher: HarperTeen

Review Posted Online: Sept. 23, 2023

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 15, 2023

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WE UNLEASH THE MERCILESS STORM

From the We Set the Dark on Fire series , Vol. 2

Thrilling, timely, and terrific.

Tragedy and heroism interweave in a story about revolution, resistance, and beautiful queer love.

After the devastating ending to We Set the Dark on Fire (2019), Carmen Santos, no longer the Segunda to Mateo Garcia, Medio’s most powerful heir, is on the run toward the La Voz headquarters. Carmen used to be one of the resistance’s most well-respected members, but after years away on undercover assignment, she finds the fabled El Buitre’s wavering leadership has taken a new, hazardous direction. Proving that her allegiance to the cause remains as strong as ever is more difficult than expected, her heart torn between her beliefs and Dani, the girl she has fallen in love with but doesn’t know yet if she can fully trust. Shifting perspective and setting to Carmen and the La Voz camp (after the first novel centered Dani and the capital) is a bold choice that ultimately pans out as readers are rewarded with Carmen’s strong, determined voice and Mejia’s lush writing depicting the complexities of the ongoing fight against oppression in a divided, Latinx-inspired world. Carmen’s divided heart rings true, her daring actions meeting deadly consequences that realistically intensify the narrative without losing track of what the fight is all about: equality for all. A second—and final—volume that not only surpasses the accomplishments of its celebrated predecessor, but takes it to a higher, brighter level.

Thrilling, timely, and terrific. (Fantasy. 14-18)

Pub Date: Feb. 25, 2020

ISBN: 978-0-06-269134-7

Page Count: 400

Publisher: Katherine Tegen/HarperCollins

Review Posted Online: Dec. 7, 2019

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 1, 2020

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