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PRICE OF DUTY

Taut, compact, and suspenseful, the novel raises important questions about war but disappointingly punts on the bigger...

Wounded in combat, Pfc. Jake Liddell returns home a hero; he has one week to decide what to do next.

Jake’s grandfather’s a general and Vietnam War hero, his father a lieutenant colonel; Jake enlisted out of high school. After rehab, he’s expected to return to war (set in an unnamed, generic Middle Eastern setting). Jake’s family couldn’t be prouder of him, but he’s haunted by memories of taking lives and watching lives being taken by an enemy that includes malnourished children and the desperately poor, their country wasted by decades of war. An attractive female school newspaper reporter wants him to publicly decry how recruiters manipulate teens—especially minorities and the poor—into enlisting, portraying war as a glamorous video game, but he’d be invalidating his family and their choices. In terms of gender, the novel feels as if it’s set during World War II: Thousands of American women serve overseas in combat and support roles, yet the novel’s soldiers are exclusively male. Under fire, the soldiers wonder if their girls, safe back home and seemingly not pursuing careers or independent modern lives, are faithful to them. They regret killing armed children and civilians but never the need to wage this war at this time.

Taut, compact, and suspenseful, the novel raises important questions about war but disappointingly punts on the bigger issues. (Fiction. 12-17)

Pub Date: July 17, 2018

ISBN: 978-1-4814-9709-1

Page Count: 192

Publisher: Simon & Schuster

Review Posted Online: April 2, 2018

Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 1, 2018

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P.S. I LIKE YOU

Readers after an enjoyable beach romance won't go wrong with this.

What happens when your intriguing pen pal and the thorn in your side are the same person?

An aspiring songwriter, Lily is always jotting down ideas for songs—even in chemistry class. One day, she ends up writing the lyrics to one of her favorites on her desk. The next day, she sees that someone has responded to her, and as might be expected, a conversation in letters begins. Not only does the white teen start falling for her pen pal, but she finds that his revelations about his family fuel her songwriting. But then two different catastrophes strike: her guitar is damaged beyond repair, wrecking her chance of entering a songwriting contest, and Lily discovers the letter writer is preppy, white Cade Jennings, the guy she can't stand—the guy who stuck her with the nickname “Magnet,” which persists two years later. Even with what she's learned about him from his letters, Lily can't get past her own immature reactions to Cade. Will her prejudices against Cade keep Lily from happiness? The answer is predictable but still satisfying. A perfectly pleasant novel, this work seems to want to be Pride and Prejudice lite.

Readers after an enjoyable beach romance won't go wrong with this. (Romance. 12-16)

Pub Date: July 26, 2016

ISBN: 978-0-545-85097-1

Page Count: 336

Publisher: Point/Scholastic

Review Posted Online: March 29, 2016

Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 15, 2016

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FLIRTING WITH FATE

An original twist on the modern fairy tale amplified by sisterly affection and a poignant sense of place.

Seventeen, studying journalism, and living with her sisters in the City of Angels, Ava Granados believes only in that which she can see. She’s about to see a lot more.

The women of the Granados family have the gift of blessings: Upon her death, a matriarch like Ava’s beloved Nana has the chance to bestow blessings upon her female descendants. When a freak storm keeps Ava from reaching Nana’s bedside in time and disrupts the passage of her blessing before Nana dies, Ava is faced with an unlooked-for challenge, unbelievable new companions, and a boy she has no intention of falling for. Intertwining past and present, stories already told and stories yet to be discovered, debut author Cervantes carries Ava through the tumultuous summer before her senior year of high school with style, charm, and wisdom. This novel will especially resonate with any young person whose formative years have been paved with stories of fierce and industrious ancestors. The Mexican American Granados sisters sit at the junction of Hollywood affluence and immigrant grit, their perspectives adding a vibrant thread to the contemporary tapestry of Latine fiction. And Los Angeles, a city of bold dreams and glittering destinies, is a character all its own: Each lovingly described neighborhood, canyon, and beach brings new emotion to the narrative.

An original twist on the modern fairy tale amplified by sisterly affection and a poignant sense of place. (Fiction. 12-17)

Pub Date: April 19, 2022

ISBN: 978-0-593-40445-4

Page Count: 384

Publisher: Razorbill/Penguin

Review Posted Online: Jan. 25, 2022

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 15, 2022

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