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COMFORT ME

From the Croy Cycle series , Vol. 2

A well-crafted tale of the troubles of high school life, told in a slightly antiquated style.

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Three troubled teenagers find support in one another in Ceci’s second YA novel in a series.

High school sophomore Mally Jacobs recently moved to Croy, Oklahoma, and he’s not thrilled about it. He’s come to live with and assist his ailing maternal grandfather, former pastor Matthew Jacobs, and the old man’s overbearing landlady, Mrs. Oldfield. Mally’s mother grew up in Croy, but she left town 15 years ago for reasons unknown to her son. On his first day of school, Randy Edom, the center on the varsity football team, reluctantly takes Mally under his wing. Randy wants to ask out one of the school’s popular girls, but his single mother keeps pestering him to get a job to help support the household, which would leave him little free time. Still, Randy inadvertently finds himself on a date with Joanie Tibbits, the bookish daughter of the local pharmacist, and the pair, along with Mally, fall into an unlikely friendship. The two boys live next door to each other on the wrong side of town, where “the run-down house on the corner was not an aberration, but more of a signpost indicating which way they were all headed.” Randy starts working in Joanie’s father’s store, and the three teens bond over Randy’s unexpected discovery of poetry. What’s more, they find that they have romantic feelings for each other: Randy for Joanie, Joanie for Randy, and Mally for Randy, as well. The three sensitive souls provide comfort for one another in conservative-minded Croy, but the secrets they harbor—which are sure to come to light sooner or later—may tear them apart just as they’ve started to realize how much they truly need one another.

Over the course of this novel, Ceci’s prose is smooth and often lyrical, as when Mally describes the feeling of realizing that there was a word—homosexual—to describe people like him: “Once last summer he’d climbed one of the pylons behind the baseball diamond for no apparent reason, his heart racing as he got closer to the thick black cables and their murderous buzz. That feeling was nothing compared to what clamored in his heart now, making the arteries in his neck jump like rabbits.” Although the general themes of the novel are more or less timeless, the book reads, in some ways, like an artifact from a previous era. It’s set in an unspecified year in the latter half of the 20th century, and the characters often feel as if they’ve been pilfered from a 1980s high school drama. This isn’t a flaw, in and of itself, but it’s possible that readers of modern YA fiction may find that the book’s language, pacing, and personalities feel somewhat old-fashioned. Even so, Ceci does paint a moving tale of friendship and community that’s in keeping with his larger project of chronicling goings-on in the slow-moving town of Croy. (The novel also includes simple, black-and-white illustrations by Crosby.)

A well-crafted tale of the troubles of high school life, told in a slightly antiquated style.

Pub Date: Jan. 4, 2021

ISBN: N/A

Page Count: 266

Publisher: Les Croyens Press

Review Posted Online: Feb. 12, 2021

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WHAT TO SAY NEXT

A pleasant romance hindered by some curious choices.

Opposites attract after tragedy strikes.

Autistic white teen David Drucker spends every lunch period eating alone. When Indian-American popular girl Kit Lowell joins him one day she’s just looking for a quiet place to sit. It’s been one month since Kit’s father, a white dentist, died in a terrible car accident, but Kit is still flailing. As the two teens get to know one another and eat lunch together each day, they find themselves bringing out their own best qualities. Slowly but surely, romance blooms. There’s a warmth and ease to their relationship that the author captures effortlessly. Each chapter alternates perspective between Kit and David, and each one is fully rendered. The supporting characters are less well served, particularly Kit’s first-generation-immigrant mother. There are two major complications in Kit’s story, both involving her workaholic mother, and the lack of development defuses some potential fireworks. The central relationship is so charming and engaging that readers will tolerate the adequate tertiary characters. Less tolerable is a late-in-the-game reveal about Dr. Lowell’s accident that shifts the novel’s tone to a down note that juxtaposes poorly with everything that came before. The author pulls out in the final few pages, but it still leaves a sour taste in the mouth.

A pleasant romance hindered by some curious choices. (Romance. 12-16)

Pub Date: July 11, 2017

ISBN: 978-0-553-53568-6

Page Count: 304

Publisher: Delacorte

Review Posted Online: June 4, 2017

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 15, 2017

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THE ODYSSEY

Hinds adds another magnificent adaptation to his oeuvre (King Lear, 2009, etc.) with this stunning graphic retelling of Homer’s epic. Following Odysseus’s journey to return home to his beloved wife, Penelope, readers are transported into a world that easily combines the realistic and the fantastic. Gods mingle with the mortals, and not heeding their warnings could lead to quick danger; being mere men, Odysseus and his crew often make hasty errors in judgment and must face challenging consequences. Lush watercolors move with fluid lines throughout this reimagining. The artist’s use of color is especially striking: His battle scenes are ample, bloodily scarlet affairs, and Polyphemus’s cave is a stifling orange; he depicts the underworld as a colorless, mirthless void, domestic spaces in warm tans, the all-encircling sea in a light Mediterranean blue and some of the far-away islands in almost tangibly growing greens. Don’t confuse this hefty, respectful adaptation with some of the other recent ones; this one holds nothing back and is proudly, grittily realistic rather than cheerfully cartoonish. Big, bold, beautiful. (notes) (Graphic classic. YA)

Pub Date: Oct. 1, 2010

ISBN: 978-0-7636-4266-2

Page Count: 256

Publisher: Candlewick

Review Posted Online: Sept. 15, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 1, 2010

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