Working my way through this year's Carnegie nominations list, The Serpent King wasn't at the top of my to-read list. The first page was good but I wasn't too sure about the plot and its religious themes. Plus, I've tried to approach this year's longest with a blank slate (ie. avoiding reviews etc) and I've done quite well. Except for the The Serpent King. And especially once it won the Morris award. I picked this book up not because it appealed to me but because of the favourable criticism it was receiving.
One of the best things, for me, about The Serpent King, was that it's a novel that I wanted to go and on. I was sad to finish it. At the end, I felt like I knew the characters and I wanted to hear more about their stories. This doesn't happen to me very often anymore (it happened a lot when I was a child/teen reader) so I was quite delighted.
The Serpent King is primarily Dill's story. He's in his last year at high school, he lives with his mother in poverty stricken conditions, and his father is a religious extremist who's in prison. But, Dill's story is very strongly interwoven with his friends Travis and Lydia such that this is also a novel about a friendship trio in rural Tennessee.
All three characters are very likeable and quite different from each other. Some wonderful dynamic tensions are played out. Character and friendship-wise, The Serpent King is reminiscent of the styles and interests of other American authors like John Corey-Whaley, John Green and Pat Schmatz.
What seems particularly distinct, for me, about this novel is the unflinching space the plot gives to an extreme religious faith. Dill's parents are fanatical and, in turn, this has made pariahs of them: not something that's easy to deal especially when you're a teenager. While the narration does not necessarily endorse this way of life, it gives it a very respectable, almost judgment free space. On the other hand, it balances it with Travis' religious family and Lydia's very educated middle class family.
This novel is full of some sincere and some (slightly) overplayed tragedies, a handful or two of good and bad luck, buckets full of dorky vintage love, a spot of glamour, and making tough and brave decisions. Hugely recommended and I'm keeping my copy.
Oh, and it's in third person - if that's the kind of thing that matters to you.
Publication details: Andresen Press, 2016, London, paperback
This copy: received for possible review from the publisher
Showing posts with label teen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label teen. Show all posts
Tuesday, 14 February 2017
Sunday, 5 February 2017
We Come Apart – Sarah Crossan and Brian Conaghan
I loved this novel from beginning to end and thought it was
one of the best books I’d read for a while. So, I waited for a few weeks before
I wrote this review, just in case that feeling wore off. It didn’t. Jointly
authored by Sarah Crossan and Brian Conaghan, We Come Apart is a clever little
book, combining voice and verse beautifully.
We Come Apart is the story of a London mascara-stealing girl
and a Roma gypsy-boy immigrant who unexpectedly find themselves on the same
community service programme. Through their contrasting perspectives and homelives,
the novel deftly explores racism, nationalism, criminality, friendships and belonging.
The two distinct voices of Nicu and Jess are captured
perfectly by the pairing of Crossan and Conaghan’s very different styles. You
are in no doubt which character is speaking. Nicu’s voice takes a little
getting used to but it’s possibly my highlight of the novel.
Perfect for fans of The Weight of Water, One and Stephen
Kelman’s Pigeon English.
It’s out in hardback in Feb 2017. If you’re not a hardback
buyer, jot this one down for its paperback release. You’ll not forget
about it because it’ll be turning up in all the award listings, I’m sure.
Publication details: 9 February 2017, Bloomsbury, London, hardback
This copy: uncorrected proof received from the publisher for review
Labels:
contemporary,
drama,
immigration,
poetry,
review,
teen,
young adult
Thursday, 2 February 2017
All About Mia - Lisa Williamson
All About Mia is all about Mia and her sibling rivalry. Mia
is a sixth former, and is a middle sibling. Her older sister is a perfect, high
achieving academic heading off to Cambridge and her younger sister is a quiet,
tween swimmer with eyes on the Olympics. Mia, on the otherhand, is popular,
curvaceously flirty, and her only talent appears to be consuming high volumes
of alcohol.
The first page is brilliant. I loved it. Turn over and it’s
about a teenager who wants to get drunk on a Friday night. Eye roll on my part
but I stick with it. It makes me smile a lot and not too long later, I’ve
finished the whole novel.
Often, I find it difficult to read – and so rarely finish -
novels with main characters like Mia whether they be child, teen or adult. They
have chips on their shoulders, gripes about everyone and everything and they think
that the world owes them everything. Yes, it’s all about them. Many times, these
novels end up with a whingey, whiney and bitter tone that I find grating. But
All About Mia is different and manages to avoid this tone possibly because the
narration doesn’t overly indulge Mia’s chips.
The novel is filled with wonderful, warmly flawed characters.
Additionally, All About Mia portrays characters, school life and family drama
in a way that I believe.
There is plenty of high drama too covering everything from sibling
rivalry, alcohol abuse, cheating friends, teen pregnancy, being dealt
consequences and how to get a grip and feel comfortable in your own skin (or
t-shirt!).
I’d heartily recommend it to teenagers and young adults. I
would feel very comfortable buying this for almost any teenager, whether I knew
their personal reading habits or not.
Publication details: David Fickling Books, Oxford, 2 Feb
2017, hardback
This copy: received for potential review from the publisher
Labels:
contemporary,
drama,
family,
friendship,
review,
teen,
young adult
Thursday, 26 January 2017
The Memory Book – Lara Avery
Two young adult novels out this month featuring Memory in
the title. Having limited time, this is the one whose first page drew my
attentions and held it the whole way through.
The Memory Book is exactly what it says. It’s a fiction
about Samantha McCoy, 17, the smartest girl in school, a champion debater and
she’s been diagnosed with a memory loss disease, a kind of dementia. She writes
The Memory Book (or types it on her laptop) to her future herself, as a way to
remind her who she is and what she did.
Sammie is a very determined girl, and her voice is
snappy-smart but without the snark, a combination that I liked. I was a bit
wary about the disease element (yeah, there are a few of those around and once
you’ve read a few they can get tiresome: sorry, I’m feeling jaded) but I
thought that it actually worked really well. A bit like many young adult novels
featuring very ill teenagers, this is a novel about making the most of your
life while you can and I felt that The Memory Book really pulled this off.
Interestingly, it made me think a bit quite a bit about
dementia, not so much in young people, but in old people and how it might
affect them in the little and big ways. Of course, it also made me think about giving life your best shot always.
There’s an interesting thread in the novel about first love
and crushes (obviously!) although they left me wondering whether or not Sam
ever really decided which was which. But does that matter anyway, whether it’s
a crush or love (that’s me thinking through after reading as it’s not directly
raised in the novel)?
I imagine this would appeal to readers who are competitively
determined – or who like debates. I would definitely recommend it to anyone who
is on a debate team, or trying to get on a debate team. Samantha McCoy is
exhausting!
Yep, I really enjoyed this novel: page-turning,
thought-provoking and poignantly wistful.
Publication details: Quercus, 26 January 2017, London,
paperback
This copy: uncorrected proof for possible review from the
publisher
Labels:
contemporary,
drama,
illness,
review,
romance,
teen,
young adult
Wednesday, 25 January 2017
How to Write Your Best Story Ever! - Christopher Edge
I am a browser and sometimes I find something that takes me by surprise. And so I happened upon Oxford University Press's How To Write Your Best Story Ever, which was published earlier this month. When I was a child, there was never as much guidance on developing your talents like there is today, and so I'm quite unfamiliar with fiction writing guides for 7-13 year olds. So I took a close look.
How To Write Your Best Story ever is not an activity journal, which is what I was expecting. There is no place intended for you to start scribbling down ideas. No. In keeping with OUP's dictionaries, How To Write Your Best Story Ever is definitely a reference book to prompt you, inspire you and help you along the way in, well, writing your best story ever with whatever writing instruments you choose.
It's a busy book (perhaps a bit busy for my eye, but I was 7-13 a long time ago!) full of colour, illustrations and chunked tips and guidance. Succinctly, it uses double spreads to tell you about the intricacies of the elements that make up a good story - and how you can get there. One of the things I liked most (there were a few), was that it devotes a few pages to writing all the different genres including Scripts and Mash-ups. It offers vocabulary to inspire you - and to challenge you - in crafting these different types of stories.
A couple of the other things that I really liked: quotes from a variety of different novels and authors (as well as Christopher Edge, who authored this book and some jolly good novels) are included as real examples of how to apply the suggestions so that you can see what the language looks like in a real live (and published) setting; and, all the way through it gives friendly reminders about the basic elements of the English language and how to identify and use them to improve your writing.
Really nice.
Publication details: January 2017, Oxford University Press, Oxford, paperback
This copy: received from the publisher for possible review
How To Write Your Best Story ever is not an activity journal, which is what I was expecting. There is no place intended for you to start scribbling down ideas. No. In keeping with OUP's dictionaries, How To Write Your Best Story Ever is definitely a reference book to prompt you, inspire you and help you along the way in, well, writing your best story ever with whatever writing instruments you choose.
It's a busy book (perhaps a bit busy for my eye, but I was 7-13 a long time ago!) full of colour, illustrations and chunked tips and guidance. Succinctly, it uses double spreads to tell you about the intricacies of the elements that make up a good story - and how you can get there. One of the things I liked most (there were a few), was that it devotes a few pages to writing all the different genres including Scripts and Mash-ups. It offers vocabulary to inspire you - and to challenge you - in crafting these different types of stories.
A couple of the other things that I really liked: quotes from a variety of different novels and authors (as well as Christopher Edge, who authored this book and some jolly good novels) are included as real examples of how to apply the suggestions so that you can see what the language looks like in a real live (and published) setting; and, all the way through it gives friendly reminders about the basic elements of the English language and how to identify and use them to improve your writing.
Really nice.
Publication details: January 2017, Oxford University Press, Oxford, paperback
This copy: received from the publisher for possible review
Labels:
children's,
non-fiction,
review,
teen,
writing,
young adult,
young teen
Tuesday, 10 January 2017
Wing Jones - Katherine Webber
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Wing Jones - Katherine Webber |
Wing Jones is a pleasure to read. Katherine Webber's writing flows, and she creates immediately likeable characters. Prejudiced attitudes to race and what constitutes criminal activity form central parts of the story without being tackled as 'issues'. The tragic event*, which provides a plot turning point, covers an issue I don't think I've seen in YA before (I'm sure it is out there though) and is tragically very real. Curiously, and despite these elements of the plot (which were my favourite), the overall tone in Wing Jones is cosily warm and those who love cute couples will no doubt be charmed.
*See below for small plot spoiler about the tragic event......
Publication details: 5 January 2017, Walker Books, London, paperback
This copy: uncorrected proof from the publisher for review
Caution: Plot spoiler follows.
Plot spoiler
Plot spoiler.
Tragic event: drinking and driving
Labels:
contemporary,
debut,
drama,
race,
review,
romance,
sport,
teen,
young adult
Monday, 12 December 2016
Dreaming the Bear – Mimi Thebo
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Dreaming the Bear - Mimi Thebo |
Darcy seemingly moves in
and out of bodily consciousness and this is interestingly written and quite
atmospheric too. Her narration of the overwhelming and consuming tiredness that can accompany debilitating illness is conveyed very convincingly. Her relationship with
the bear is an interesting one. It provides a storyline with heartstring-pull moments (oh yes, I did cry) and explores worthy questions about wildlife
habituation but I didn't feel this was as richly conveyed as Darcy's consciousness was, perhaps because the novel is quite short.
Characterwise, Darcy, perhaps justifiably, is a whinger. Yes, she is ill but she’s very spoilt too: it’s
in her tone, in her thoughts and in her shopping behaviour so I struggled to
warm to her. Sometimes that matters when I read a book. In terms of character
development, she does change and she does become more aware of the different
ways of life around her.
The cover and the size of the book made me think this was a middle grade novel but I think the interest level is perhaps for readers older than 9 or 10 years, and definitely for teens too.
The cover and the size of the book made me think this was a middle grade novel but I think the interest level is perhaps for readers older than 9 or 10 years, and definitely for teens too.
Dreaming the Bear has been nominated for the 2017 Carnegie
Medal.
Publication details: Oxford University Press, 2016, Oxford,
paperback
This copy: received for review from the publisher
Thursday, 1 December 2016
The Smell of Other People’s Houses – Bonnie-Sue Hitchcock
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The Smell of Other People's Houses - Bonnie-Sue Hitchcock |
Labels:
Carnegie2017,
contemporary,
culture,
debut,
drama,
historical,
religion,
review,
teen,
young adult
Wednesday, 16 November 2016
Alpha – Bessora and Barroux
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Alpha - Bessora & Barroux (translated: Sarah Ardizzone) |
Alpha is a book I would have on my coffee table, my
reception area table, the boardroom table, the canteen, and definitely in every
classroom or library: big, bold, great to look at, immediately immersive,
whichever pages you are flicking through and something that I want everyone to
see.
This is the story of Alpha, a cabinet maker who journeys
from Abidjan (Cote d’Ivoire, Africa) to meet his family at the Gare Du Nord
(Paris, France, Europe). Along the way,
he compares himself to a backpacking adventurer, although without a visa and
dwindling cash, he finds that most other people regard him as an illegal
immigrant.
Labels:
adult,
awards,
Carnegie2017,
children's,
human rights,
illustrated,
review,
teen,
young adult
Monday, 7 November 2016
Highly Illogical Behaviour – John Corey Whaley
Highly Illogical Behaviour – John Corey Whaley
Likely to be a novel that I recommend widely to a variety of
people.
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Highly Illogical Behaviour - John Corey Whaley |
Solomon Reed hasn’t been outside for three years. He’s a
sixteen year old agoraphobe, unable to cope with the displeasing complexities
of the outside world, most probably other human beings. Lisa Praytor has a
scholarship dream and a control problem. Put the two together and you have a
potentially cheesy sitcom drama or you have a novel that is thoroughly
entertaining and reflective. You might even get a friendship. Throw in
Superman, Star Trek, a church-going summer camper, and things coming out of the
closet, and you definitely get Highly Illogical Behaviour.
Solomon Reed is an adorable character. Like most of the
crazy kids, there is much more to him than meets the eye – and even he doesn’t
realise this. I thought that Lisa might have made the novel terribly annoying,
but even she grew on me. I loved the way that the relationship between Lisa and
her boyfriend, Clark, is turned on its stereotypical head when it comes to sex.
The novel is written in the third person, and I think this ramps
up the humour level a little because the narrator throws in some background
details that are exactly what we’d probably all be thinking but would never
tell. The narrator alternates their attention between chapters for Solomon and
Lisa buts puts in a lot of dialogue – and some of it is paragraphs long. But,
you don’t notice this and the writing flows at a pacey rate.
One of my favourite lines from the novel (and yes, it’s on
the book’s back jacket blurb): “Sometimes life just hands you the lemonade,
straight up in a chilled glass with a little slice of lemon on top.” Sums the
novel up perfectly, really.
If you like John Green’s writing and if you laughed out loud
and fell in love with The Rosie Project, Highly Illogical Behaviour will
probably also hit the sweet spot for you. It did for me.
Highly Illogical Behaviour has been nominated for the 2017
Carnegie Medal.
Publication details: Faber & Faber, 2016, London,
paperback
This copy: review copy from the publisher
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