Posted in Theme Tuesdays

Theme Party Tuesdays: Travel-Themed YA

Hey guys, I swear I’m actually going to be punctual this time :p

Since I just finished a great travel-themed novel, Aix Marks the Spot, I thought this second Theme Party Tuesday might be a good time to highlight some of my favorite travel-themed YA novels. Let’s get started!

5. Best Unconventional Travel Story: “Field Notes On Love” by Jennifer E. Smith

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What It’s About: after his girlfriend breaks up with him shortly before they were to go on a nonrefundable train trip across the U.S., a British teenager puts out a classified ad asking for a woman with the same name as his ex to accompany him on the trip with his ex’s ticket. He and the replacement girl, who happen to be the same age because this is YA, fall for each other as they train trip across the USA.

Why I Liked It: this book was never JUST about the travel, or JUST about the romance; it was also about family and finding your passions and place in the world. It handled all of that with heart and you could tell the author loved these characters. Also, nothing I’ve ever read has made a cross-country train trip sound so appealing, and that includes my cousin’s travel blog about train-tripping across Europe.

Where I Read This: on a plane to a family reunion in Sonoma (fitting, no?)

Recommended For: hopeless romantics and lovers of trains and/or thoughtful romances.

4. Best Road Trip Book: “I Wanna Be Where You Are” by Kristina Forest

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What It’s About: a ballerina devises a plan to sneak off to an audition in another state that her mother would never allow her to attend, but when her neighbor/ex-crush/arch-enemy tags along, things get a little more complicated.

Why I Liked It: Chloe, the protagonist, is an incredibly likable lead, and her passion for ballet was evident. I loved the dance side of the book, and road trip + frenemies-to-lovers = BEST combination. This one wasn’t the most explicitly travel-based of the books on this list – the road trip wasn’t really the point (if you want that, go with “Amy and Roger’s Epic Detour,” which was considered for this list but didn’t make it) – but “I Wanna Be Where You Are” was a lot of fun and surprisingly heartfelt.

Where I Read This: as an audiobook, while hiking with my mom over the summer. (Obviously, it took several hikes.)

Recommended For: dancers, frenemies-to-lovers fans, and anyone who likes books WITH travel but not ABOUT travel.

3. Most Unputdownable: “Anna and the French Kiss” by Stephanie Perkins

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What It’s About: American girl sent to boarding school in Paris falls for France and a charming classmate, but there is seemingly no end of hurdles to overcome before she can earn her happily-ever-after

Why I Liked It: okay, I know what you’re gonna say. “Anna” is undeniably cliché, totally soapy, and not anything that would be trendy today (diversity – who is she?). But absolutely none of that stops it from being the book equivalent of crack cocaine. AKA: once you start reading this, you will not be able to stop. I might get roasted for unabashedly loving this book, but it makes me happy: the writing is good, the characters are endearing (at least, the leads…most of the side characters drove me nuts), the Parisian setting is evocatively drawn, and it’s totally unputdownable. This was the perfect summer book. A joyous love letter to Paris, the teenage years, and love itself, “Anna and the French Kiss” is an enduring favorite.

Where I Read This: frantically, in my bedroom over the last two days of summer before senior year.

Recommended For: Francophiles and people who grew up on early 2010s YA and want to be reminded of the inflated expectations they had for their high school experience before it inevitably ended up being blah.

2. Best Use of Setting: “I Love You So Mochi,” Sarah Kuhn

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What It’s About: Japanese-American high school student Kimi spends the spring break of her senior year in Japan with the grandparents she’s never met, falls in love, and goes on a journey of self-discovery.

Why I Liked It: there’s a very specific feeling I get when I’m reading a book that’s going to be special to me. It feels like the night before vacation, or eating a delicious dessert and knowing that I can eat as much as I want and without getting sick to my stomach. “I Love You So Mochi” was one such book. It’s both intensely visual and highly introspective, describing sense and setting so well that Kyoto is practically its own character and emotion so well that we feel like we’ve known Kimi all our lives. I felt like I was watching a feel-good, visually stunning indie coming-of-age movie. I can’t really describe what it was that I loved about this book in terms that I feel do it justice – you’ll just have to read it.

Oh, and the romance was adorable. 

Where I Read This: various places, including an AirBnB in Sedona, over the first few weeks of summer vacation.

Recommended For: fashion and art enthusiasts, soul-searchers, people like me who are enamored of anything from or involving Japan (…I feel attacked), and teenagers struggling to find their place in the world.

1. Overall Favorite: “Love & Gelato” by Jenna Evans Welch 

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What It’s About: girl sent to live with her late mother’s old college classmate in Italy finds love and explores the country – and tries to solve the mystery of who her father is.

Why I Liked It: “Love and Gelato” made me feel nostalgic for experiences I’d never even had, and if I had to describe it in a word, that word would be “wistful.” As protagonist Lina opens up to those around her and experiences life in Italy for the first time, you can’t help but fall in love with the people and places she encounters right along with her. The wistful romance of both the setting and the relationship Lina develops with the literal boy next door (which is *chef kiss*, by the way), and the excitement of the search for Lina’s father, absolutely melted my heart. If I ever get to go to Europe, I’d want it to be exactly like “Love and Gelato.”

Where I Read This: in my bedroom at midnight on a school night, because I couldn’t stop until I finished.

Recommended For: anyone. I’m not kidding. Anyone.

What books would’ve made your list? Know of any good travel-themed YA books I should check out? Theme suggestions for next week’s Theme Party Tuesday post? Leave me a comment to let me know 🙂

Posted in Reviews

REVIEW: “The Blossom and the Firefly” by Sherri L. Smith

For whatever reason, this book didn’t grab my attention the way some others did in the months leading up to its release. Even though it had a lot of the qualities that often attract me to a book (set in Asia, VIOLINIST CHARACTER!, historical), I kind of forgot it existed.

Stupid, considering that it was compared to two of my all-time favorite books (“Code Name Verity” and “Lovely War”).

Also stupid, considering that when I did pick this up on a whim from the bookstore next to the Rubio’s Coastal Grill where I was waiting for my dinner one random Sunday night, I found myself completely blown away.

SUMMARY

Japan 1945. Taro is a talented violinist and a kamikaze pilot in the days before his first and only mission. He believes he is ready to die for his country . . . until he meets Hana. Hana hasn’t been the same since the day she was buried alive in a collapsed trench during a bomb raid. She wonders if it would have been better to have died that day . . . until she meets Taro.

A song will bring them together. The war will tear them apart. Is it possible to live an entire lifetime in eight short days?

REVIEW

Though it’s not really being used as a comp title, if I had to describe this book’s unique storytelling format, the best example I can come up with is Thanhha Lai’s “Butterfly Yellow.” Both are historical novels told almost in verse, both alternate perspectives between members of the lead couple, and neither really follows a linear timeline. “The Blossom and the Firefly” follows Taro, who’s what we would probably know as a kamikaze pilot, and Hana, a schoolgirl from southern Japan, through the last two years of WWII, as they meet in the week leading up to Taro’s final mission. However, the perspective alternates – Taro’s chapters are written in free-verse-esque prose, Hana’s in traditional first-person narration – and for the first half of the story, the chapters from Taro’s perspective are actually flashbacks to his childhood. That unusual narrative style has the effect of distancing the reader from the story at first – which makes it all the more heart-wrenching when, back in the present, we’re brought closer to the characters. As the two begin to realize what they have left to live for, I found myself pulled in – and dreading what all three of us (myself, Taro, Hana) knew was coming.

That’s part of this story’s magic – Sherri Smith has mastered the art of tension. Because we, and the characters, know from the start that Taro’s entire job is to die, we spend the entire book in a state of preemptive mourning for his too-short existence. Watching as he plays the violin, falls for Hana, befriends fellow pilots who are also destined to die, take on a new degree of heartbreaking in light of his eventual fate. And the romance between Hana and Taro, however subtle, is one of the most gorgeously-written love stories I’ve read in ages. If you’ve ever heard of the Kiss Rule – “if you have to write a kiss for the reader to know that the couple is in love, you’re writing love wrong” – this is the best example of a Kiss Rule-passing book I’ve read in ages. Taro and Hana don’t so much as hold hands on-page, but the way they fall for each other through their musical connection, as they play their respective instruments (violin and koto) for each other, is clear as day with none of the usual hallmarks of love. There’s no kiss, no physical contact whatsoever, no “I love you,” no dramatic confession – but it’s clear as day that these two were made for each other, and it’s heartbreakingly beautiful. Really, everything about “The Blossom and the Firefly” could be described as such: the romance, yes, but also each protagonist’s relationships, and their erstwhile connections to music, and the setting and era – one we all think we know, but which this book makes entirely new. (So much WWII fiction focuses on the European Theater of the war that a Pacific Theater book like this seems pretty rare, although another of those came out recently).

Really, I’m still in awe. I cannot recommend this beautiful, beautiful novel highly enough.

(SPOILER: Taro ends up surviving, but we don’t learn that until nearly the end of the book, and Hana doesn’t learn it until the LAST PAGE, so the impact of his “death” is not lessened in the slightest.)

ENDNOTES:

Favorite Scene: since I can’t say “all of them”: probably the one where Taro is playing in the mess hall on base and Hana begins to dance for the first time since her accident, or the one in which they play together from across town. PEAK FREAKING ROMANCE.

What Made This Book Stand Out: almost everything but particularly the deep and beautiful romance that develops between two flawed, real, lovable characters with little time on-page or IRL, and how convincing that romance is.

One-Sentence Summary: stunningly gorgeous WWII romance will leave you sobbing while listening to Mozart violin sonatas and an absolute mess.

Something that Bugged Me: almost nothing, but the one thing that bugged me EVER so slightly was that it ended before HUUUUGE SPOILER Taro and Hana actually reunite – it ends at “hello,” which is beautiful and a great narrative choice, but dang it, I wanted to see the actual reunion! END HUGE SPOILER 

 Possibly-Questionable Content: other than two curse words and the inherently disturbing nature of wartime life, none.

Overall Rating: 5/5 Confused Llamas

Posted in Reviews

REVIEW: “Loveboat, Taipei” by Abigail Hing Wen

SUMMARY 

When eighteen-year-old Ever Wong’s parents send her from Ohio to Taiwan to study Mandarin for the summer, she finds herself thrust among the very over-achieving kids her parents have always wanted her to be, including Rick Woo, the Yale-bound prodigy profiled in the Chinese newspapers since they were nine—and her parents’ yardstick for her never-measuring-up life.

Unbeknownst to her parents, however, the program is actually an infamous teen meet-market nicknamed Loveboat, where the kids are more into clubbing than calligraphy and drinking snake-blood sake than touring sacred shrines.

Free for the first time, Ever sets out to break all her parents’ uber-strict rules—but how far can she go before she breaks her own heart?

REVIEW

I am not completely sure why, but I love books set in Asia. Maybe I’m just fascinated by books that immerse me in a culture that is about as far from the one I was raised in as you can get, or maybe they satisfy my wanderlust; I’m not completely sure. Whatever the source of that fascination, though, it’s what led me to “Loveboat, Taipei.”

This one was a little but out-of-left-field for me because normally, I avoid anything racy like the plague. (Let’s just say I very much related to Ever, whose parents are so strict about the content she’s allowed to view that she can’t even watch a kissing scene in a movie, at the beginning of the book.) A book that’s almost solely about teenage rebellion is normally not my speed and I was a little skeptical going in that I’d be comfortable reading this, and in a way, those worries were justified. Ever’s behavior did make me uncomfortable at times, and there was a lot more adult content than I would have preferred, but she does (to an extent) learn from the mistakes she’s made in an attempt at rebelling against her parents in as many ways as she can. But I also enjoyed “Loveboat” immensely.

The characters, for one, all kept me on the edge of my seat with their unpredictable behavior. A lot of them aren’t fantastic people (I write this thinking of one particular character who’s set up as likable, only to dramatically betray another character and completely trash our opinion of her) or at least don’t seem like it (that would be another character who’s written off as a playboy at first but later turns out to be a sweetheart who merely has a lot on his plate), but Wen has done a superb job in making us want to know what happens to all of these people. Ever reminded me a lot of myself, Rick is the kind of guy I wish I knew more of in real life, and even the more complicated characters, like Sophie, Xavier, Jenna, and Ever’s parents, aren’t black-and-white. Everyone has layers, flaws, struggles…and redeeming qualities. I did not expect this book to get half as deep as it did at times, and it was through those multifaceted characters and their struggles that it accomplished that depth. Similarly, the fact that I loved both Rick and Ever individually made it much easier to love them as a couple when the romance kicked in – which I did. They were adorable, and I may or may not have had to stifle a squeal when I read certain scenes because it was 1:30 in the morning and I could not wake up my family screaming about how sweet Ever and Rick’s budding relationship was.

The setting was another aspect of “Loveboat” that completely sucked me in. This book really digs its claws into the culture and atmosphere of Taiwan (not just in Taipei – there are several scenes set in more rural areas that make use of the same superb scene-setting). From its descriptions of physical locations and cultural practices to the moments it touches on the class and ethnic divides in Taiwanese society, “Loveboat, Taipei” did a wonderful job of capturing Taipei through the eyes of an outsider (Ever) for people who have most likely not been to Taiwan (us).

All of that combined to make for a book I couldn’t put down. Though I often wanted to shout through the pages at Ever’s decision-making (a lot of it influenced by people she likely shouldn’t have listened to), she did learn from the consequences of her actions. Unfortunately, the fact that those actions were often a little more graphically described than I was comfortable with dulled my enjoyment of the book slightly, but nevertheless, no book I stayed up until 2 AM to finish could have been anything but worth it.

ENDNOTES

Favorite Scene: there were a lot of scenes in contention for this designation, but I think I’m going to have to go with the scene where Ever reads Rick’s confession/years-late reply to her letter asking for homework help. That was the moment I mentioned when I had to try not to squeal loud enough to wake the dead at 1:30 AM.

What Made This Book Stand Out: the expertly-portrayed Taiwanese setting and the rich, layered, real characters. (Oh, and the adorable romantic subplot didn’t hurt.)

One-Sentence Summary: strict parents + teenagers set loose in a foreign country = recipe for more tension than you’d believe.

Something that Bugged Me: Sophie’s entire story arc. She’s a scarily real portrait of how far desperate people will go to get what they want and while that arc was definitely well-written, it didn’t really endear her to me. (To avoid spoilers: let’s just say I’m not as forgiving as some of her friends.)

 Possibly-Questionable Content: implied sexual content, one semi fade-to-black scene, semi-bloody scene involving snake-blood sake that I personally found a bit gross but isn’t terribly gory, one character gets revenge on another in an extremely malicious way, discussion of suicide attempt by minor character, a little bit of cursing.

Overall Rating: 4/5 Confused Llamas

Posted in Interviews

An Interview with Sara Fujimura, on “Every Reason We Shouldn’t”

Hey, all! Super stoked to bring you a new interview – this one with Sara Fujimura, author of the upcoming figure skating rom-com “Every Reason We Shouldn’t”! (You can check out my review of that here: REVIEW: “Every Reason We Shouldn’t” by Sara Fujimura).

1. As a former figure skater who spent many years in the sport, I was extremely excited when I heard about this book, since figure skating is not the most common subject of YA novels (understatement). What made you decide to write about it – personal skating experience, or something else?

 

I love to watch skating (all kinds), but I am not particularly good at it. What inspired Every Reason We Shouldn’t was Apolo Ohno’s autobiography No Regrets. I was completely fascinated by the account of his teenaged years. Specifically, when Ohno was at the crossroads and wondering if he should quit the sport all together because his raw talent was no longer enough. Jonah’s character actually came to me first, and Apolo Ohno very much influenced him. I saved the crossroads story for Olivia though. I have two ultra-talented girls (now young women) in my life, and I got to see—thanks to their moms—what it’s like to be that one-in-a-million teen and all the unique challenges that come with being that high level of athlete/performer. One is a dancer and the other a singer, but I wanted a girl who was into ice sports to work better with Jonah’s character. As super cheesy as it is, I love The Cutting Edge. I wanted to write an updated (and much more realistic) version of the movie with teen skaters.

 

2. Again on the topic of skating: as a skater and avid fan of the sport, I’m extremely picky about how the technical side of figure skating is portrayed in fiction (okay, maybe I’m a little bit of a snob…), and in “Every Reason We Shouldn’t,” you absolutely nailed it! What did you do to research that resulted in such an accurate portrayal of the figure skating world?

 

Thank you! All of my books have a lot of “fact behind the fiction,” but ERWS had a steep learning curve for me. I started as a journalist, so I take my research very seriously. I read everything I could and watched countless videos and tutorials. I also sought out people who were experts (or at least experienced) in all the areas I am not. Do you know who has a ridiculous depth of knowledge on everything figure skating? Author Courtney Milan. Her remarkable, super nit-picky notes helped me take this book to the next level. Obviously, it paid off if I passed your test despite being a crap skater in real life myself.

 

3. What would you say your “mission statement” as a writer is, and how does “Every Reason We Shouldn’t” tie into that mission?  

 

“I write stories for adventurous, intelligent, globally-minded teens who aren’t afraid to love someone outside of their own ethnicity.”

 

One of the biggest compliments I’ve gotten for ERWS is that people feel like my characters are people they would want to be their friends. Yes, Olivia and Jonah are unique and sometimes straight-up “extra,” but I think they mirror my readers who are maybe unintentionally looking for someone like themselves. 

 

NOTE: Question #4 could get a little spoilery! Proceed with caution if you haven’t read the book yet.

 

4. After reading “Every Reason We Shouldn’t,” one of the things I’m most conflicted about is how I’m supposed to feel about Stuart (Egg), Olivia’s pairs partner. Given his actions at the end of the book, he comes off pretty strongly as a jerk, but he’s also, before that, a decent friend and partner to Olivia. Thus, I’m very torn between seeing him as the villain for abandoning her and seeing him as a sympathetic but flawed friend. Obviously, readers like me have to make that call themselves (I’m leaning towards “selfish jerk” right now), but what do you, as the author, think of Egg: sympathetic or deplorable?

 

People may disagree with me, but I sympathize with Egg, who is at a crossroads in his life and makes a wise (if a bit jerky) decision to put himself first for a change. Egg knows he’s not good enough to skate at an Olympic level and for him to invest another four years of his life to live Olivia’s dream would be unauthentic. (On a smaller scale, think about the people who may sit first chair in their high school’s band, but don’t go on to study music at college. Music can still bring them joy even if they know they don’t have what it takes to play professionally.) ERWS wasn’t about Olivia winning a gold medal either, and not all my readers are on-board with that. I wrote it for all the teens standing at the crossroads in their own lives. For when the thing they love the most (and maybe have a ton of raw talent for) has suddenly gotten too hard and they are questioning if they are at the end of their journey or if they should push through the pain/frustration to see if they can make it to the very top. It’s one thing when you are injured or cut from a team. There the decision is made for you. It’s when YOU have to decide whether to continue or not that things get interesting (and more relatable to many people). That’s what I wanted to explore in ERWS. To keep Egg and Olivia together was the safe choice and wouldhave held both of them back from being the best versions of themselves. And as much as I would love to have gone all Cutting Edge with Olivia and Jonah, *every* skater (including former German Olympic pairs skater Mirko Goolsbey) said that it would be impossible.

  

End of spoilers! You’re safe again 😉

5. To wrap up, this is sort of a standby question for me in author interviews: how would you describe Every Reason We Shouldn’t in six words? 

 

Yuri on Ice meets Cutting Edge

POST-INTERVIEW PERSONAL CAVEAT:

Having gotten the author’s insight on her book, I can honestly say that I love “Every Reason We Shouldn’t” even more. Thinking about the theme of crossroads in this novel, I’m brought back to the moment in tenth grade when I had to make my final choice: whether to pursue skating even though I’d hit a plateau and had little time to train anymore, or whether to focus on academics as I had been doing my first two years in high school with the added bonus of being able to pursue theater with my extra time. Though I was never even close to Olivia’s level as a skater, it was an all-consuming passion for much of my childhood, and I’d given up a lot to pursue it even at the level that I did. I’d spent every single morning of each summer between 6th and 11th grade at the rink, put countless hours into training, and, sadly, probably wrecked any chance I ever had at developing a healthy body image by the age of 16. So that feeling of grasping at straws that you feel when you realize it might be time to move on from a dream is one I felt wholeheartedly. As you can probably guess, I quit skating, and if I’m honest, I don’t regret it. But I’ll always remember how hard those last months were, realizing I was never going to reach my childhood dream. (And that feeling kind of never goes away. Ms. Fujimura’s example of the musician in their school band was almost uncanny because I’ve also played the violin since I was nine. As I struggle with tricky runs in the Tchaikovsky concerto that most of my orchestra friends could play in their sleep, I face the realization that I have to figure out how music, a passion I’ve pursued practically forever and am never going to “make it” in, will play into my life as I prepare to graduate from high school.) For a senior in high school, that stuff is huge and never really lets up, so knowing that “Every Reason We Shouldn’t” was written about a character who feels the same way, with the intention of bringing comfort to teenagers who don’t know what comes next for their passions, makes me love it all the more. This book came to me at just the right time, and I hope those of you who choose to read it come March (and I hope all of you do) feel the same way.

Posted in Reviews

REVIEW: “The Perfect Escape” by Suzanne Park

Thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for an advance copy. “The Perfect Escape” is projected to be released on April 7th, 2020.

I was elated to get this ARC because there are very few things in this world than I love more than niche YA rom-coms. Meaning: ones that take place in the context of some unusual interest, setting, or topic. (To give you an idea of what I mean by that, some niche rom-coms I’ve liked include “Hart & Seoul” and “Somewhere Only We Know” with K-Pop, and “Every Reason We Shouldn’t” with figure skating.) “The Perfect Escape,” with a zombie/survivalist focus, falls squarely in that category, but…didn’t really do it for me. Here’s why.

SUMMARY 

Nate Jae-Woo Kim wants to be rich. When one of his classmates offers Nate a ridiculous amount of money to commit grade fraud, he knows that taking the windfall would help support his prideful Korean family, but is compromising his integrity worth it?

Kate Anderson wants a fresh start, away from her controlling father. She fantasizes about escaping to New York, where she can pursue her dreams. But how can Kate get there when she can’t even buy dinner without his approval?

Worlds collide when Nate and Kate meet at the zombie-themed escape room where they both work. As sparks fly, fate steps in: a local tech company is hosting a weekend-long survivalist competition with a huge cash prize that could solve all their problems. The real challenge? Making it through the weekend with their hearts intact…

REVIEW

Without a doubt, my favorite thing about this book was the zombie/escape room/survival competition thing. Whenever Nate and Kate discussed their favorite zombie movies, planned for the survival contest, or worked at the escape room together, the book took on a whole new kind of energy. It was funny and fast-paced and enthusiastic and exactly what was promised by the book jacket.

Unfortunately, though, the zombie stuff took up very little actual page time.

Up until the 62% (I’m pretty sure) mark, when the survival contest started, we got a lot more of their personal lives than we did of the zombie thing. Instead of spending time at the escape room (I’m pretty sure there are only two scenes that take place at work – it was almost like the author forgot about their jobs after the plot no longer needed them), we’re taken to a high school party at a roller rink. When I was expecting the two to be geeking out over zombies and plotting for the contest, Kate was fighting with her father – who might be the worst father in all of YA, mind you – and Nate was juggling his chaotic family life with his classmates’ insistence that he commit grade fraud on their behalf. Certainly, those issues had a place in this story, but they took up so much of the book that I felt myself missing both the zombies I was promised and the rom-com that this story was marketed as.

That was all the more sad because when those things were in the spotlight, I really enjoyed them. This could have been so fantastically unique and hilarious had it been okay with being a little…lighter. Oftentimes it felt like the book was trying so hard to be deep and substantial that it forgot that it was a rom-com. Had it let loose in a few more places, it would likely have been one of my favorite reads in recent memory. “The Perfect Escape” was an example, to me, that it’s okay to have fun with a story. It’s certainly noble to try to say something with your work, and I commend Park for doing that. But sometimes, a story can exist just because it makes people happy. A story can exist for the joy of it. “Escape” got a little depressing at times, and though everything sort of gets its magic band-aid in the end, I wished that I would’ve spent more of the time it took me to read this laughing. Because if the bright spots in this book showed me anything, it’s that this book knows how to be absolutely hilarious. 

I just wish it would have been more often.

ENDNOTES

Favorite Scene: the scene where Nate visits his sister’s kindergarten class as her show-and-tell. Small children saying weird things in front of crowds because they have zero filter is honestly a recipe for comedy gold (see: children’s messages at my church) and I was dying of laughter this entire scene. DYING. I wanted more of that in this book.

What Made This Book Stand Out: the uniqueness of a rom-com about zombies.

One-Sentence Summary: what it says on the tin, with a few less zombies and a little more crying.

Something that Bugged Me: the tonal whiplash whenever the story switched from rom-com to family drama and back – see literally my entire review.

 Adult Content: a LOT of cursing and, like, two kisses, but that’s pretty much it.

Overall Rating: 3.5/5 Confused Llamas

 

Posted in Reviews

REVIEW: “Renegades” by Marissa Meyer

I must confess, dear reader, that as far as hyped-up YA series go, my readership is positively dreadful. I’ve read the Selection series, the Illuminae Files and An Ember In the Ashes (the latter two are some of my favorites), but other than that, I have not read many of the best-known YA series. Not Throne of Glass, nor any of the many highly popular Cassandra Clare offerings, the Lunar Chronicles, or the Raven Cycle – heck, I haven’t even read Harry Potter, of all things. So my experience with popular series is extremely minimal.

Hence, when I downloaded “Renegades” – a book I didn’t know much about other than that it had superheroes in it and was wildly popular – as an e-book on a boredom-induced whim during Christmas break, I had no idea what to expect. I’d heard good things, and I will read absolutely anything with superheroes in it, so…not a bad way to spend a break, right?

So. Here are my thoughts on a rare foray into Hyped-Series-land.

SPECS

Author: Marissa Meyer

Series Position: first of three books

Page Count: 566

Summary: 

Secret Identities. Extraordinary Powers. She wants vengeance. He wants justice.

The Renegades are a syndicate of prodigies — humans with extraordinary abilities — who emerged from the ruins of a crumbled society and established peace and order where chaos reigned. As champions of justice, they remain a symbol of hope and courage to everyone… except the villains they once overthrew.

Nova has a reason to hate the Renegades, and she is on a mission for vengeance. As she gets closer to her target, she meets Adrian, a Renegade boy who believes in justice — and in Nova. But Nova’s allegiance is to a villain who has the power to end them both

REVIEW

Let me start by saying that “Renegades” has a ridiculously compelling story. Post-apocalyptic (ish) world ruled by superheroes? Morally-murky government machinations? Divided loyalties? Teenage superhero teams? It would be very difficult to mess up such a promising premise, and Meyer more than cashed in on the potential for action and tension and emotion in those concepts. After taking almost a week to finish the first half of the book, I finished the second half in two days. A truly compelling story can feel almost addictive, and this one hit that mark with flying colors. (Am I mixing metaphors? Yes. Do I care? DOES IT LOOK LIKE I DO, DEAR READER??? Okay. Anyway.)

That was also my issue with this book. Because while that last half was a rip-roaring 250 pages of pure adrenaline, the first half made me consider putting the book aside.

Now, it’s not as if I had an actual problem with the first half. It was just…slow. So, so slow. And when the slow first half is as long as some entire books are (this already-long book definitely felt longer than it was), that’s kind of a mood-killer. I’m incredibly glad I held out and waited for the story to pick up steam, because as I said, once I’d had time to get to know the characters (Honey and Danna have my ENTIRE HEART) and the story picked up, it was !!!!. But I thought that the book could’ve been shorter because of that. A lot of the establishing scenes probably could’ve been cut with little narrative consequence. Most of them focus on establishing Nova’s relationships with the Anarchists, and while a little bit of that is necessary to clarify who her loyalty is so divided when she joins the Renegades, we probably didn’t need a hundred pages of it. Getting to the Trials faster would’ve improved my reading experience. But the story was still insanely compelling, the characters were fleshed-out and lovable, and the world-building was fresh and interesting. Now that the story’s picked up steam, I can’t wait to spend more time in this world in “Archenemies.”

In the end, this one is not without flaws, but I believe it deserved the hype.

ENDNOTES: 

Favorite Scene: hmm…probably when the Renegades are giving Nova a tour of their headquarters, which was really fun and an example of a good and necessary and interesting “establishing shot.” That, or the scene in the library, which I can’t say much about because spoilers – it’s a great action sequence (probably what movie people would call a “set piece”…SOMEONE GET ME A RENEGADES MOVIE ASAP).

What Made This Book Stand Out: the underlying complexity of an action-y story, which is only just alluded to and promises to be built on in the next books.

One-Sentence Summary: great if you want to be convinced that there really is no such thing as a good government.

Something that Bugged Me: the pacing, as I’ve said on eight thousand occasions.

Adult Content: surprisingly, this one is actually very clean. There’s quite a bit of comic book-ish violence, but it’s not gratuitous or gory, and there MIGHT be a handful (literally a handful – no more than five, probably) of curse words but I can’t remember if there are or aren’t – that’s it. Seriously.

Overall Rating: 4.5/5 Confused Llamas

 

Posted in Reviews

REVIEW: “Above All Else” by Dana Alison Levy

Thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for this advance copy. “Above All Else” will be on sale October 13th, 2020. [Side note: I will be IN COLLEGE when this is released. WHAT? I’m not okay with this guys  a h. Okay anyway. Back to the scheduled programming of book reviews!]

Summary 

Rose Keller and Tate Russo have been climbing for years, training in harsh weather and traveling all over the world. The goal that kept them going: summiting Mount Everest, the highest point on earth. Accompanied by Tate’s dad, the two will finally make the ultimate climb at the end of their senior year. But neither Rose nor Tate are fully in the game—not only is there a simmering romance between them, but Rose can’t get her mind off her mother’s illness, while Tate constantly fails to live up to his ambitious father’s standards.

Everyone on their expedition has something to prove, it seems. And not everyone is making the best decisions while short on oxygen and physically and mentally exhausted. The farther up the mountain they go, the more their climbing plans unravel and the more isolated each team member becomes. Rose and Tate will have to dig deep within themselves to determine what—or who—they value above all else.

REVIEW

This is it, guys – my last ARC of 2019. Whoa. Crazy, right?

Okay, first off. That cover! Easily one of the prettiest covers I’ve seen this year. That was what initially drew me in but it was the premise – when else are you ever going to find a YA book about teenage mountaineers climbing Mt. Everest? – that made me request it. And to that end, it definitely lived up to my expectations. But in other ways, it really didn’t. Let me explain:

Starting off with the good, the author clearly did her homework. In the author’s note, Levy mentioned having taken several research trips to Nepal (where this book is set) while writing “Above All Else,” and it seriously shows. The setting is incredibly well-captured with the kind of detail that only someone who’d seen the places they were describing firsthand would be able to capture. And although I don’t know enough about mountaineering to say whether the process of the climb was portrayed accurately, it certainly seemed to be. It was obvious that the author’s research on Nepal, mountaineering, and Mt. Everest had been exhaustive. That level of detail made for a great sports/adventure novel even when other aspects of the plot fell short.

I also liked that it struck a balance of life issues and climbing issues. Though Rose and Tate’s quest to climb Mt. Everest was obviously the driving plotline, Levy did well in incorporating the kids’ real-life issues into the central conflict. Both have very believable issues with their families (Rose’s mother is ill, Tate constantly clashes with his father) and in their personal lives (Tate has ADHD and mild PTSD from a climbing accident, Rose and Tate have feelings for each other that they don’t know how to process) that get in the way of their focus on climbing the mountain. And I loved the exploration of what going though such a grueling experience does to you not only physically, but morally and psychologically. I’d never thought about this, but Levy makes in an excellent point in emphasizing that accomplishing a goal that requires so much of you, and that carries such a high risk, really does change you in that it requires absolute self-centeredness. The constant refrain of “is any achievement really worth becoming a person you hate for?” is fascinating. And none of this felt like a distraction from the plot as a whole. But…there was ONE subplot that absolutely did not earn that distinction.

You’ll almost never hear me say this, but I honestly thought this book would have been stronger without the romance.

I know. I KNOW. Me, who will literally always be in favor of a romance being shoehorned into absolutely everything, not wanting one? Shocking. But seriously. For a few reasons, I really wished Rose and Tate had just been friends.

Firstly: their personal issues were poignant enough without the romance that it wasn’t needed to give the book emotional depth. Plain and simple, it was unnecessary, and there was almost no way in which it actually served the plot. It may have been a contributing factor to a big fight they had late in the book, but there were so many other reasons that happened that I can’t very well say that their burgeoning romance caused it. Basically, it accomplished nothing – I felt like it was there just to be there.

Secondly: it came out of nowhere. I know they were best friends, but other than one description of Rose blushing at an accidental touch, there had been absolutely no indication that their love for each other extended beyond a deep platonic bond until Tate kissed her out of the blue around the 40% mark. It was just…weird. They had a great friendship, and I was really hoping it would stay that way because there was no indication that it wouldn’t before that kiss (except in the summary that I didn’t read carefully enough), but nope. I’m almost never the “just let the girl and guy who obviously care deeply about each other be friends” person, but this book was an exception.

And lastly: the way the romantic subplot was written sort of fell into the “stereotypically hormonal teenagers” trap so much that, I’m sorry to say, at times it kind of read like fanfiction. It’s not that it was badly written; the comparison is more just in that this book took every possible excuse to get them in bed together. Even if I wasn’t Super Uncomfortable with sexy stuff in books (I gravitate towards adventure stories partly because they have less of that since you can’t very well get scandalous when you’re fighting for your life…I was wrong), that would have been weird. There was a good 20% in the middle that I had to skim because it got so much more graphic than I was comfortable with. I’m not sure how realistic it was that they went from childhood besties to Uncomfortably Physical after ONE KISS while FACING CERTAIN DEATH? Idk man. It was weird.

All of that sounds super harsh, and I feel bad for being so hard on this book when I actually did really enjoy it. I love sports and adventure books, and the setting was novel and excellently-realized, and I liked the characters (especially the supporting cast), and really, the romance didn’t kill it because *SPOILER* they get separated right after they get together, so it’s not that much of the book *END SPOILER*. And there was one scene at the end that genuinely made me want to cheer. “Above All Else” was a gripping adventure that I greatly enjoyed – its only major flaw was that it tried to be a romance when it really wasn’t.

ENDNOTES

Favorite Scene: at the end, when Tate conquers his internal demons for long enough to rescue some dying climbers who no one else was willing to help – that was the best moment of this entire book by far.

What Made This Book Stand Out: the novelty of the setting and premise, and its impeccably-researched descriptions of Nepal and mountaineering.

One-Sentence Summary: man, this mountain is really out to get these kids…

Something that Bugged Me: …didn’t I already beat that dead horse enough times?

Adult Content: quite a bit of language, TONS of making out (described pretty graphically), and at least one sex scene that’s sort of described but I’m not really sure to what extent because I skipped over that section.

Overall Rating: 4/5 Confused Llamas

Posted in Lists and Rankings

Year-End Rankings: My Favorite 2019 YA Releases

What a year it’s been! With over 130 books read and most of them YA, I had my work cut out for me when I decided to rank the top 10 YA reads of the year. Granted, I split that ranking into two posts – one for 2019 releases, one for everything else – but these 10 were still narrowed down from a list of about 30-40 books. So yeah. This was difficult.

But I stand by my choices!

10. Last of Her Name by Jessica Khoury

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Reviewed?: no

Why?: “Last of Her Name” was an absolute blast. It’s essentially a retelling of the Anastasia legend In Space™, and since I am an absolute sucker for both Anastasia and space opera, this was one I knew I had to read. And I loved it as much as I thought I would: its Space-Russia(!) worldbuilding, compelling story, and eminently root-for-able protagonist just about guaranteed that. I would absolutely LOVE a sequel to this. (Oh, also! It’s CLEAN!)

9. Hart and Seoul by Kristen Burnham

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Reviewed?: Yes! and I also interviewed Kristen Burnham about this one.

Why?: more than any other book on this list, “Hart and Seoul” came out of NOWHERE. Despite surveying the Goodreads shelves of upcoming YA releases for months, I had no idea this was coming out until it became available on NetGalley. I requested it on a whim, expecting…not much, since I hadn’t heard of it. And lo and behold, it scored the 9th-place slot in my year-end book ranking! (That’ll teach you not to underestimate an indie release!) I’m pretty sure that of all the books on this list, this one made me laugh the most; it had one of the best romances I’ve read this year; and I just generally want 86 more books of Merri and Lee’s adventures in love and psycopathic K-pop fan-avoidance. (Also, Kristen, the author, was my first interview and is generally a sweetheart who deserves the world. So go buy this book pls?)

8. Dangerous Alliance by Jennieke Cohen

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Reviewed?: sadly, no

Why?: I am a passionate lover of historical fiction and classic literature, so a YA romance about an Edwardian-era Jane Austen fangirl? SIGN ME UP. “Dangerous Alliance” was an absolutely delightful story that, while it revolves around romance, is not particularly romantic until the last third or so. It’s got sisters(! I LOVE GOOD BOOK SIBLINGS) and 19th-century-British-socialite scheming and fancy dress balls and all that good stuff but also attempted murder, sabotage, and all manner of skullduggery. And I’ll give you a spoiler: justice is served and everyone gets a happy ending. This one was a lot of fun.

7. Spin the Dawn by Elizabeth Lim

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Reviewed?: yes, but not by itself.

Why?: to be completely honest, the majority of my love of this book came from the fashion design contest bit. The idea of a Medieval Chinese (I think? The setting reminded me of Han Dynasty China) monarch staging some sort of Ye Olde Projekte Runwaye is absolutely irresistible and both the descriptions of the clothes, and the machinations of the competitors, are amazing. I loved that. And then Maia, our eminently lovable Fashion-Design-Mulan protagonist (she essentially does the exact same thing that Mulan does but instead of going to war in her father’s place, she goes to compete in the design contest), goes on a Quest with her not!boyfriend, and by this point I’m eating it all up with a spoon, and by the end I JUST WANT MORE. This was my exact favorite kind of everything.

6. Descendant of the Crane by Joan He

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Reviewed?: here

Why?: Descendant was not necessarily the book on this list that I enjoyed the most, although I did love it (hence the low-ish rating), but it is absolutely the best-written. Joan He is incredibly gifted at crafting plots that’ll leave your head spinning and prose that will make you weep at the realization that you will never write a single sentence half as well as she wrote this entire book. (Or is that just me? Eh, you get it.) Descendant of the Crane‘s quality is undeniable, and it reminds me a lot of a Chinese-inspired version of Megan Whalen Turner’s “Queen’s Thief” series (which includes my all-time favorite YA novel, The King of Attolia). That’s a pretty high compliment.

 

5. Aurora Rising by Jay Kaufman and Amie Kristof 

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Reviewed?: yup!

Why?: I’m not ashamed to admit that “Guardians of the Galaxy” is my all-time favorite movie, and that is exactly the kind of vibe I got from this book…except that this space-traveling team of misfits is made up of teenagers, and instead of Thanos, their unseen Big Bad is a government cover-up that could threaten all life in the universe. (Does it really? I’m pretty sure we don’t know yet. But it’s Kaufman and Kristoff, so it’s probably going to be a galaxy-wide threat kinda deal. It’s sort of their thing.) “Aurora Rising” perfectly blends peril and comedy, romance and suspense – and I ate it up with a spoon. No, seriously, I read this nearly-500-page book in a day. And I can’t wait for “Aurora Burning” next year! Eep!

4. I Love You So Mochi by Sarah Kuhn 

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Reviewed?: pretty sure I talked about it briefly here.

Why?: this book was just…PRECIOUS. The romance is the sweetest thing ever, Kimi’s passion for design is infectious (what is it with me and fashion design books?), and watching Kimi explore Japan felt like doing so myself. But really, what stood out to me about this book was that it’s very…idk, visual. I felt like I was watching a movie the entire time – I could picture almost every scene, and some of those scenes (the sewing shop scene, the scene at the Temple at Nara where Kimi and Akira feed the deer…and the alleyway almost-kiss after…) were so strongly visual that I can still picture them, seven months after reading the book. It takes a certain type of writer to bring that strong of a visual association to their writing – Sarah Kuhn is such an author.

3. Somewhere Only We Know by Maureen Goo

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Reviewed?: very gushily, I might add.

Why?: see review. Basically says it all. Or, tl;dr: I loved everything about it and it was COMPLETELY worth the five-month wait.

TIE: “Lovely War” by Julie Berry and “The Fountains of Silence” by Ruta Sepetys

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Reviewed: “Fountains” – no, “Lovely” – yes: REVIEW: “Lovely War” by Julie Berry

Why?: 

My co-winners had a lot in common.

Both are historical fiction and set either during or shortly after a war. (I am such a sucker for wartime romances…it was kind of inevitable.)

Both have prose so beautiful it makes you cry and some of the most moving romances I’ve ever read.

Both have gorgeous covers!

And both are among the best books that I have ever read. I cannot recommend either of these two absolutely beautiful novels enough.

So…do you agree with my rankings? What would have been on yours? Let me know in the comments. And merry Christmas to those who celebrate 🙂 

Posted in Reviews

REVIEW: “The Language of Cherries” by Jen Marie Hawkins

I received an advance copy of this book from NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. “The Language of Cherries” will be released February 11th, 2020. 

SUMMARY 

When Evie Perez is cut off from everything she loves and forced to move to Iceland for the summer, she takes her canvas and paintbrushes into the picturesque cherry orchard behind her guesthouse. She stains her lips with stolen cherries in the midnight sun and paints a boy she’s never met.

Oskar is startled to discover Evie in his family’s orchard, and even more surprised to see himself on her canvas. Too ashamed to reveal his stutter, he remains silent as Evie returns day after day to paint, spilling confessions she wouldn’t even tell her priest.

As Evie’s life back home unravels, Oskar wants to comfort her with words, but he knows he’s waited too long, so he uses music instead. But when it all comes to the surface, he knows that if Evie can’t forgive him for lying, he may never forgive himself for surviving.

Review 

I don’t think it’s a coincidence that, in an early scene, it’s mentioned that bookish protagonist Evie is reading Gabriel Garcia Marquez’s “A Hundred Years of Solitude,” because I feel like the author was going for a sort of “Icelandic Garcia-Marquez” vibe. That was one thing I didn’t expect at all, especially because I put this book on my TBR (months ago…) before its full summary was out: “The Language of Cherries” is more magical realism than contemporary romance. (Hence the Garcia-Marquez connection – I can sorta see the influence of his work here with not only that, but the evocative power of the setting, the importance of Latin American culture to the story, and the lyrical prose.) I don’t want to spoil much, but there’s a lot more Gaelic druid magic than I expected in a book that seemed, to me, like a fish-out-of-water summer romance story. Usually, magical realism isn’t my cup of tea (I still get flashbacks to my 10th grade English class where we had to analyze Latin American magical realism ad nauseum), but it worked here, probably because I’d never seen it used in this setting. The only MR I’d ever read had been set in South America and used various South American traditions, mythologies, and cultures as its backbone, so this one was unique in that it completely removed the genre from the only setting I’d ever known it in. It used Gaelic mythology (the protagonist is half-Scottish) and Icelandic setting for a very interesting take. And speaking of the setting – gorgeous. Super atmospheric, and I want to go to Iceland now. That’s a testament to the quality of the writing, which was also excellent. I loved the use of Oskar’s song lyrics as vehicles to move the story forward.

The characters and plot didn’t enthuse me as much.

What I will give Hawkins is that Oskar and Evie are both very fleshed-out, flawed, and real. They seemed like actual people you might know. But as such, they’re both kinda…unlikable at times. That actually isn’t a bad thing; it takes a good writer to make you sympathize with a character that you also kinda can’t stand. They have reasons for being how they are. And I did love their wordless summer romance. But in the end…well, I kinda just didn’t like them. I appreciated Evie’s growth, though. The plot had a bit of the same: it seemed a little all-over-the-place, more patchy than linear. Yes, things happened along a linear timeline, but each chapter read a little more like an individual slice-of-life vignette than part of a larger story, at least to me. And certain plot points (…druid magic) weren’t really elaborated upon. They showed up, they were sort of just there, and that was that.

I feel like there’s more to this book than I can easily convey in this little review, so you’ll have to read it yourself if you want to get what I’m talking about. (It’s available for free, automatically, on NetGalley – I’d highly encourage all of you to check it out that way!) But, though I wasn’t absolutely in love with every part of the story, “The Language of Cherries” is a rich, evocative, and singularly unique novel that’s likely to be unlike anything else you read.

ENDNOTES

Favorite Scene: when Agnes (Oskar’s aunt), Evie, and Oskar attend an outdoor market. Super adorable romance-development scene that gives us one of the best looks at Icelandic culture that we get in the entire book.

What Made This Book Stand Out: its extremely unique setting and magical realism vibes.

One-Sentence Summary: this is most definitely not what it says on the tin.

Something that Bugged Me: early in the book, Evie is described as being the only Hispanic student at a Catholic high school in Miami. That had me raising my eyebrows because I go to a Catholic high school in another major U.S. city with a huge Hispanic population, similar to Miami’s, and my school’s student body is overwhelmingly Hispanic. I didn’t want to assume Florida had the same demographics as California, though, so I did some research on demographics…and sure enough, the majority of Catholic high schools in Miami proper have Hispanic majorities. I loved the Catholic school mention because, well, that’s my life, but as a Cuban-American, Evie would most likely be far from atypical at a south Florida Catholic school. (Obviously some such schools are exceptions to this, but the majority of them are not.)

Adult Content: a bit of vulgar language throughout; a fade-to-black implied sex scene + the subsequent fallout; Oskar is kind of a stoner at the beginning; Evie and Oskar’s entire relationship is based on a lie at first.

Overall Rating: 4/5 Confused Llamas

Posted in Reviews

REVIEW: “My Long List of Impossible Things” by Michelle Barker

Thanks to NetGalley for the ARC. “My Long List of Impossible Things” will be released on March 10th, 2020. 

Summary

The arrival of the Soviet army in Germany at the end of World War II sends sixteen-year-old Katja and her family into turmoil. The fighting has stopped, but German society is in collapse, resulting in tremendous hardship. With their father gone and few resources available to them, Katja and her sister are forced to flee their home, reassured by their mother that if they can just reach a distant friend in a town far away, things will get better. But their harrowing journey brings danger and violence, and Katja needs to summon all her strength to build a new life, just as she’s questioning everything she thought she knew about her country.

Katja’s bravery and defiance help her deal with the emotional and societal upheaval.  But how can she stay true to herself and protect the people she loves when each decision has such far-reaching consequences?

Acclaimed writer Michelle Barker’s second novel explores the chaos and destruction of the Second World War from a perspective rarely examined in YA fiction—the implications of the Soviet occupation on a German population grappling with the horrors of Nazism and its aftermath.

Review

I will admit, I requested this book solely on the basis of “it has a girl playing a piano on the cover, and I’m always looking for YA about music [b/c I’m a violinist and I constantly look out for books about teenagers who are classical musicians like myself],” and somewhat because I enjoy historical fiction. I don’t usually love war stories, though, so I was a little apprehensive. As it happened, this was anything but a typical war story; it had a very fresh angle on the reality of civilian life in wartime that I really appreciated.

Barker primarily built up that unique voice by telling the story of a recovering nation through the eyes of a young woman who’s largely been (up until now) somewhat sheltered from the horrors of the war raging around her. Katja has, obviously, suffered through the loss of family members, heavy rationing, and general decline in standards of living along with the rest of Germany, but as to the political and human rights sides of the story, she might as well have been living under a rock. Her life hasn’t really been interrupted in a huge way by the war – times are leaner, but her town hasn’t been bombed, she’s unaware why her friends and neighbors have begun disappearing, and when she hears talk of death camps, she has no reason to believe them. We, the readers, who are presumably aware of some of the history of WWII Germany, are in the unique position of knowing far more about what happened during the war than Katja does; her ignorance stands out much more in light of that. She’s living in a world where unspeakable horrors are taking place all around her, but for the most part, Katja is still just a teenage girl with teenage-girl concerns (albeit a lot more hyperfocused on finding a piano to practice on than the average teen – I sympathized with that). For that, the story is very human. The war doesn’t make a hero of Katja or anyone she knows. They’re all ordinary people doing the best they can to stay afloat in hard times, few of them aware just how dark their times are. Their suffering has been immense, but few realize how much worse it could be. Telling a war story – something countless authors have done – in the voice of an uninformed civilian, was a smart move. It raises ethical questions about the nature of war and complicity, and it makes a time period most of us today can’t even imagine seem incredibly real. [Note: “My Long List of Impossible Things” is NOT a commentary on Nazism, nor does it seem like it was intended to be; instead, it’s about how war affects civilians. I say that just as a warning, since those expecting the book to have a lot to say about the evils of the Nazi Party will probably be disappointed that that topic isn’t really addressed much.]

Other than the deep stuff covered in that ridiculously long-winded paragraph, this was an intriguing little novel. Katja’s intentional ignorant voice came off as obnoxious at times (probably on purpose), and I definitely wanted to throttle her on several occasions – probably because I knew I would’ve been equally stupid if I were in her shoes. War stories either tend to paint their characters as either heroes or tragic figures; that Katja is neither – she’s a teenage girl, and as petty, idealistic, and unthinking as any other – makes it easy to insert oneself into the time period and examine how one might react in the same situations. And, on a much shallower note, I loved the recurring theme of the importance of music to Katja. As a classical musician, I got that on a spiritual level (not really but you know what I mean), and I *loved* Katja’s annoyingly incessant quirky-composer-facts. It wasn’t all that much of the book, but it was one of my favorite parts. Even the romance (SPOILER: doesn’t work out too well – I actually loved how Katja handled that, showed a lot of growth) was well-done; Katja and Arkady’s bonding over music was *heart eyes.* (Reminds me of myself and my current crush, a pianist who I sometimes play duets with, and who 99% probably doesn’t like me back, but still. Irrelevant.)

Though the voice was occasionally juvenile, I think it was intended to be as such; thus, I’m not going to count that as a knock against the writing. On the whole, I greatly enjoyed “My Long List of Impossible Things,” and found that it had a lot to say about what it means to be a human being in a time and a place where human life doesn’t seem to have much value anymore.

ENDNOTES

Short Summary: a story we all know, told by an eyewitness who doesn’t.

Recommended For: fans of historical fiction or anyone with a particular interest in WWII, especially the civilian side.

Objectionable Content: the story is far removed from the actual battlefield, but the brutality of the occupying Soviet forces isn’t sugarcoated, and some of the events described are quite disturbing. In addition, characters frequently curse in German; Hilde, Katja’s older sister, makes lewd comments twice to shock her sister.

Rating: 4.5/5 Befuddled Emu