by Kerry L. Malawista ‧ RELEASE DATE: Sept. 15, 2022
A timely look at moving through loss that’s told with insight, compassion, and wry humor.
Jody is hovering on the cusp of puberty in 1970 New Jersey when her mother dies; an eventful year follows.
The fatal car accident changes everything for the Morans: 13-year-old Jody, her three sisters, little brother, and their newly minted widower dad. Even for an affectionate, easygoing family like theirs, adapting to abrupt, tragic loss is uniquely challenging. There’s a steep learning curve; mistakes are made. Their first housekeeper is mentally unstable, and the second has substance-abuse issues, so all are relieved when their maternal grandmother moves in to help. Parenting rules change: Jody and Claire, 15, get their ears pierced. Claire, having acquired a boyfriend, becomes Jody’s role model and sometime guide to boys and her changing, womanly body. Recovering from loss is an uneven, occasionally irrational journey. As the shock subsides and daily life reasserts its primacy, Jody finds herself evaluating unattached women as possible stepmoms. Elisabeth Kübler-Ross’ book On Death and Dying becomes Jody’s touchstone for interpreting her grief. Malawista’s quietly powerful novel consists of an accumulation of minor, well-observed details that together create a montage of adolescence in difficult times limned with pointillist precision. The believable, refreshingly average Morans are good company. Jody’s a likable guide for adolescent readers experiencing irreversible loss even as they negotiate the exciting, seemingly infinite possibilities of adulthood. Characters default to White.
A timely look at moving through loss that’s told with insight, compassion, and wry humor. (Fiction. 12-14)Pub Date: Sept. 15, 2022
ISBN: 978-1-64603-265-5
Page Count: 266
Publisher: Fitzroy Books
Review Posted Online: June 7, 2022
Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 1, 2022
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by Rae Carson ‧ RELEASE DATE: Sept. 1, 2011
Despite the stale fat-to-curvy pattern, compelling world building with a Southern European, pseudo-Christian feel,...
Adventure drags our heroine all over the map of fantasyland while giving her the opportunity to use her smarts.
Elisa—Princess Lucero-Elisa de Riqueza of Orovalle—has been chosen for Service since the day she was born, when a beam of holy light put a Godstone in her navel. She's a devout reader of holy books and is well-versed in the military strategy text Belleza Guerra, but she has been kept in ignorance of world affairs. With no warning, this fat, self-loathing princess is married off to a distant king and is embroiled in political and spiritual intrigue. War is coming, and perhaps only Elisa's Godstone—and knowledge from the Belleza Guerra—can save them. Elisa uses her untried strategic knowledge to always-good effect. With a character so smart that she doesn't have much to learn, body size is stereotypically substituted for character development. Elisa’s "mountainous" body shrivels away when she spends a month on forced march eating rat, and thus she is a better person. Still, it's wonderfully refreshing to see a heroine using her brain to win a war rather than strapping on a sword and charging into battle.
Despite the stale fat-to-curvy pattern, compelling world building with a Southern European, pseudo-Christian feel, reminiscent of Naomi Kritzer's Fires of the Faithful (2002), keeps this entry fresh. (Fantasy. 12-14)Pub Date: Sept. 1, 2011
ISBN: 978-0-06-202648-4
Page Count: 432
Publisher: Greenwillow Books
Review Posted Online: July 19, 2011
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 1, 2011
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by Leza Lowitz ‧ RELEASE DATE: Jan. 12, 2016
It’s the haunting details of those around Kai that readers will remember.
Kai’s life is upended when his coastal village is devastated in Japan’s 2011 earthquake and tsunami in this verse novel from an author who experienced them firsthand.
With his single mother, her parents, and his friend Ryu among the thousands missing or dead, biracial Kai, 17, is dazed and disoriented. His friend Shin’s supportive, but his intact family reminds Kai, whose American dad has been out of touch for years, of his loss. Kai’s isolation is amplified by his uncertain cultural status. Playing soccer and his growing friendship with shy Keiko barely lessen his despair. Then he’s invited to join a group of Japanese teens traveling to New York to meet others who as teenagers lost parents in the 9/11 attacks a decade earlier. Though at first reluctant, Kai agrees to go and, in the process, begins to imagine a future. Like graphic novels, today’s spare novels in verse (the subgenre concerning disasters especially) are significantly shaped by what’s left out. Lacking art’s visceral power to grab attention, verse novels may—as here—feel sparsely plotted with underdeveloped characters portrayed from a distance in elegiac monotone. Kai’s a generic figure, a coat hanger for the disaster’s main event, his victories mostly unearned; in striking contrast, his rural Japanese community and how they endure catastrophe and overwhelming losses—what they do and don’t do for one another, comforts they miss, kindnesses they value—spring to life.
It’s the haunting details of those around Kai that readers will remember. (author preface, afterword) (Verse fiction. 12-14)Pub Date: Jan. 12, 2016
ISBN: 978-0-553-53474-0
Page Count: 272
Publisher: Crown
Review Posted Online: Sept. 15, 2015
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