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STACKED

books

  • STACKED
  • About Us
  • Categories
    • Audiobooks
    • Book Lists
      • Debut YA Novels
      • Get Genrefied
      • On The Radar
    • Cover Designs
      • Cover Doubles
      • Cover Redesigns
      • Cover Trends
    • Feminism
      • Feminism For The Real World Anthology
      • Size Acceptance
    • In The Library
      • Challenges & Censorship
      • Collection Development
      • Discussion and Resource Guides
      • Readers Advisory
    • Professional Development
      • Book Awards
      • Conferences
    • The Publishing World
      • Data & Stats
    • Reading Life and Habits
    • Romance
    • Young Adult
  • Reviews + Features
    • About The Girls Series
    • Author Interviews
    • Contemporary YA Series
      • Contemporary Week 2012
      • Contemporary Week 2013
      • Contemporary Week 2014
    • Guest Posts
    • Link Round-Ups
      • Book Riot
    • Readers Advisory Week
    • Reviews
      • Adult
      • Audiobooks
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      • Non-Fiction
      • Picture Books
      • YA Fiction
    • So You Want to Read YA Series
  • Review Policy

LGBTQIA+ Roundup

August 31, 2016 |

This year, I’ve been making more of an effort to read YA books featuring LGBTQIA+ characters. This means I’ve been reading more realistic contemporary YA, since most (but not all!) of these characters are focused there. Here are brief reviews of the five I’ve read so far this year.

LGBTQIA+ roundup

The Great American Whatever by Tim Federle

Sixteen year old Quinn is an aspiring screenwriter, still in the closet, and still grieving over the death of his sister, Annabeth, in a car accident at the end of last school year. He and Annabeth were a dynamic movie-making duo – he would write the scripts and she would direct. Since her death, Quinn hasn’t been able to do much of anything, much less finish a screenplay. He doesn’t even leave his house. Until his best friend Geoff convinces him to go to a college party Geoff’s sister is throwing – and he meets someone there who could maybe be his first more-than-a-friend.

Quinn’s first romance with another boy is a big part of the story, but it’s part of his larger journey in learning to deal with his grief over Annabeth’s death and how it has affected his family and friendships. Federle gives Quinn a great voice; he’s often funny (or irritating, depending on your perspective) and will insert film trivia into everyday conversation, something that will appeal to teens who love movies (current and classics). Federle writes some of Quinn’s story as imagined scenes in a script, which adds interest – it’s like an alternative to a daydream sequence. The romance is exciting and thorny and realistic. I took issue with how Quinn refers to his mother; his father left them following Annabeth’s death and she has gained weight and hoards junk food. While he often calls his mother beautiful, almost every reference of her involves a mention of her weight or her junk food obsession, which I found reductive and shallow. Calling a fat woman beautiful isn’t a band-aid for this and Quinn (or Federle) seems to think it is.

None of the Above by I. W. Gregorio

Kristin learns she’s intersex after she tries to have sex with her boyfriend and it’s extremely painful. She goes to the doctor, who shares the life-changing information with Kristin: she has an X chromosome and traditionally male “parts” – they’re just inside instead of outside. Kristin has androgen insensitivity syndrome, or AIS, which is one of the most common forms of intersex and one where people can outwardly appear biologically female (though people with AIS can exhibit the full range of phenotypes). Kristin tries to hide the diagnosis from everyone she knows, feeling ashamed and like she’s not a “real girl.” But when she lets it slip to one of her best friends one night, the whole school knows the next day, and her nightmare really begins.

This book will be foundational for stories about intersex people. It’s not perfect (the writing is a bit rough and simplistic at times), but it’s a perfect book to lead the way. It’s moving – Kristin slowly does accept herself and reconcile her chromosomal reality with her identity as a girl – as well as educational. I’m certain there will be many readers who won’t even know what being intersex means, not to mention even more readers who haven’t ever heard of AIS and don’t know how it affects people. Gregorio is a doctor and it shows: she gives readers details about Kristin’s condition that are fascinating and important. Kristin has a good voice, and Gregorio doesn’t let her story shy away from how horrible people can be. I was on pins and needles during one scene where the threat of violence loomed so large it was hard to keep reading. I highly recommend this book; it’s a great YA story and it helps fill the “I” gap in in LGBTQIA+ literature for teens.

Draw the Line by Laurent Linn

Adrian is gay, and he knows that if the school bully Doug and his toady Buddy found out about it, he’d be a target for their fists. After all, Doug routinely goes after out-and-proud Kobe. Adrian uses art as an outlet: he invented a gay comic book superhero, Graphite, and regularly posts new stories featuring Graphite and his exploits anonymously online, where he has a small following. But when Doug beats up Kobe so badly he almost dies, Adrian starts to learn that he can’t just stay in the shadows when injustices like this routinely occur – he decides that this is where he draws the line (yes, I worked in the title).

This is probably the weakest of the five I’ve reviewed here. Its strongest aspect is the art: Linn includes several excerpts from Graphite’s adventures and they’re really nicely done. It’s clear Linn/Adrian is a talented artist and storyteller. But overall, the plot is meandering and the writing weak. It feels like half of the novel is exposition, and there are a lot of scenes that don’t serve much purpose. It’s over 500 pages long, and it feels like it. Adrian’s best friends are stereotypes and Doug’s character arc doesn’t make much sense. Linn tries to give Adrian a teen-y voice in his writing style, but it just comes across as unpolished (especially compared to the superior books by Federle and Whaley, both authors whose writing is sophisticated but whose characters feel like teens). It’s still a worthwhile read, but it’s not a standout unless you’re really into the art.

If I Was Your Girl by Meredith Russo

It’s a good thing I branched out more into contemporary reads this year, because this is one of my favorite reads. Amanda moved to live with her dad because it will allow her to go to a different high school, away from the one she was at before where everyone knew her as Andrew. Amanda is a trans girl, and she knows she’s fortunate in that she can pass as a cis girl at her new school – so much so that she’s considered one of the prettiest girls in school. Amanda falls for Grant, despite her vow to keep her head low, stay away from guys, and graduate high school without letting anyone in or causing any trouble, like she promised her dad. But inevitably, the truth comes out, and Amanda must deal with how her newfound friends, boyfriend, and classmates react.

While this book is not without conflict (the threat of violence is always there), it does paint a rosy picture of one trans girl’s experience. Amanda passes easily. She had surgery at a young age so no one can tell she’s trans even with her clothes off. Her parents more or less accept her. By the end of the book, many of the people she came to care about at her new school have accepted her as well, though the journey there is rocky. Russo, who is trans herself, acknowledges this in her author’s notes (she writes one for trans readers and one for cis readers) and says it is deliberate: this is a story of hope. It is also not every trans person’s experience, and shouldn’t be read that way. I’ve seen some reviewers criticize Russo’s writing, but I thought it was quite strong and read as if Amanda herself were writing her story. She has a singular voice and the ability to make readers feel her pain, worries, and frustrations keenly. Lovely throughout, this is highly recommended.

Highly Illogical Behavior by John Corey Whaley

In middle school one day, Solomon had a panic attack and jumped into the fountain at the front of the school. He hasn’t been out of his house in the three years since, trapped by his agoraphobia. His parents seem to have accepted it, long ago giving up on encouraging him to get out of the house. Lisa, one of Solomon’s former classmates, learns of Solomon’s condition and decides to make him her project. She wants to get into a prestigious psychology program at a particular college, and she thinks “curing” Solomon will be just the thing to do that. So she weasels her way into Solomon’s life, eventually bringing her boyfriend in on the scheme as well. Lisa didn’t expect she’d actually like Solomon, that they’d form a true friendship, but that’s what happens. For his part, Solomon is resigned to living the rest of his life in his parents’ house, but he can’t seem to shake Lisa’s overtures of friendship, and when her boyfriend starts coming over too, he can’t seem to shake his burgeoning feelings for him, either.

Whaley’s writing is top-notch, though I would argue that he hammers home his point a little too firmly when it would have been better to just let it sit, the point having already been made. Lisa is a terrible person (one professional reviewer described her as likeable, which I find funny) and I shudder to think what kind of psychologist she would make, but she’s always interesting to read about, and there are plenty of tender moments between her and Solomon. Whaley succeeds at writing Solomon as more than just his illness, as someone who has strengths and personality and smarts even though no one can really see them. What could have been a hackey book is instead something pretty great in Whaley’s hands – his characters come alive and so, too, does the book.

Three of out of these five titles feature gay white teenage boys as their protagonists, and within the still small selection of LGBTQIA+ books for teens, this character dominates. It’s harder to find books featuring girls, teens of color, or characters who don’t identify with the “G” part of the acronym. On that note, next on my list are Georgia Peaches and Other Forbidden Fruit by Jaye Robin Brown, which published yesterday, and As I Descended by Robin Talley, out September 6. I’ll let you know how they are.

Filed Under: lgbtq, Reviews, ya fiction, Young Adult, young adult fiction

The Lie Tree by Frances Hardinge

August 24, 2016 |

lie tree hardingeFaith Sunderly and her family are moving temporarily to the island of Vane, where her natural scientist father has been hired to help excavate a dig site. The Reverend Erasmus Sunderly made headlines years ago when several of his fossil finds appeared to verify Biblical stories, something much of the British public desperately needs in this time when Charles Darwin’s On the Origin of Species is making waves in the scientific community. But more recently, Faith’s father’s work has come under more scrutiny, and though he tries to hide it from his family, most scientists now consider him a fraud.

Faith is fourteen and hungry for two things: scientific knowledge and her father’s affection. The former cannot come with the latter, however, because Faith’s father is of the common mindset of the time that women and girls are incapable of deep thought and scientific study. So Faith collects her knowledge in private, secretly opening her father’s trunks and sneaking out at night to see what mysterious plant he is keeping in the cave by the sea.

But then the unthinkable happens – Faith’s father is found hanging limply over a tree limb, dead. The people of Vane begin to whisper that he killed himself, but Faith is sure it was murder, and she’s determined to prove it – to unmask the murderer herself and get justice for her beloved father. And she means to do it with the assistance of the plant in the cave, the Lie Tree, a tree that thrives in the dark and will give hazy truths to anyone who feeds it – and the world – lies.

Faith is smart, sometimes scarily so, and her scheme begins as planned. She wants the Tree to reveal the murderer of her father, but in order for that to happen, according to her father’s papers, she must convince the world of a lie. The more people who believe it, the bigger the truth that will be revealed to the liar. Faith is an astute observer of men, so she knows that the easiest lie is one that people want to believe. But Faith is blind about many things too. This book is not just about the lies we tell others, but the lies we tell ourselves.

It’s also about women and girls, then and now. Faith is not an astute observer of women, and watching her interactions with her mother are often painful as an adult reader. Faith herself has bought into the mindset of her father in subtle ways, though she does not realize it. And while the rest of the world has underestimated her, to their detriment, she has underestimated its women, to her cost.

It’s about relationships, too, not just those between parents and children, but between friends, in particular the burgeoning friendship between Faith and a local boy named Paul. It’s such an interesting friendship, one that begins antagonistically and slowly transforms into a partnership, with neither person particularly caring if the other likes them. One of the book’s greatest scenes is between Faith and Paul near the end of the book, where what they’ve shared together has finally bonded them in a lasting way and they reveal their own truths – pieces of themselves – to each other.

The Lie Tree, aside from exploring these often heavy themes I’ve described above, is also a cracking good mystery and revenge story with a fascinating fantasy twist. I was unsure about the identity of the murderer (and even the murder itself) up until the final reveal. It’s a satisfying ending that puts all the pieces together and gives greater meaning to all that came before. And by the end of the book, Faith is fundamentally different from who she was at the beginning, though she is still inimitably herself.

The Lie Tree won the Costa (formerly Whitbread) Book of the Year Award in the UK, one of the few book awards I know of that pits children’s books against adult books. With all the trash articles about young adult literature being published now, it’s not hard to surmise that few adult readers would place a children’s book above an adult book, no matter its quality. But The Lie Tree was chosen, and this fact further illuminates how truly remarkable it is, beating out books by Kate Atkinson and Anne Enright, among others.

I’ve been participating in my workplace’s Mock Printz considerations, and this one is at the top of my list right now. It’s a masterpiece of a book, one that shares something new with each page turned. It’s a book I wish I had written, a book I wish I had read when I was fourteen. Hand this to readers who want a feminist book, who love their genres well-blended, who want their leisure reading to make them think deeply while also telling a hell of a good story.

Filed Under: Fantasy, Historical Fiction, Mystery, Reviews, ya, ya fiction, Young Adult, young adult fiction

We Need To Talk About Reviews & Criticism

August 15, 2016 |

Confession — and this is a really hard one to make — but when I read reviews in trade journals like SLJ, Kirkus, and others, my tendency is to believe the reviewer is white.

This comes from a few factors. First, librarianship and reviewing tends to be heavily white. Second, I’ve seen so many calls specifically seeking out reviewers of color that I tend to not think about the pool of existing reviewers who are people of color. And third, perhaps most important and vital to express, is that I’m white and as much as I try to be conscious of the world around me, I live in a world where white dominates and thus, it’s my default. It’s difficult to say that because I know so many passionate folks of color who write excellent, thought-provoking criticism and who are passionate about children’s and YA lit.

And yet, I still fall into that trap.

A few weeks ago, I picked up Fiona Wood’s upcoming YA novel Cloudwish. I’ve spoken highly of Wood’s previous novels, and this one made me excited. The story is about a young Vietnamese Australian named Vân Uoc who grew up in a poor part of Melbourne with immigrant parents. Their dreams for her included not just getting a solid education and going into a well-paying field, but they also want her to live in a well-to-do suburb. Since they didn’t have this and since they were immigrants, it’s what they want most for their daughter.

This is not an uncommon theme.

Vân Uoc, on the other hand, has begun school at a prestigious secondary institution, where she’s enrolled in the fancy and highly-competitive and challenging IB program. She’s on scholarship and the pressure on her to do well is even higher than it already was. But Vân Uoc has found herself falling in love with art and creation; rectifying her love for art and making it and thinking about it with the hopes and dreams of her parents is one of the biggest challenges in her life. She doesn’t want to disappoint — her name, by the way, means “Cloudwish” — and yet she doesn’t want to forgo what she’s passionate about, either.

The story also includes a hefty dose of romance. Vân Uoc has fallen for a white boy in her school. She’s been mad for him for a while, but she believes he’s entirely out of her league. But when the story begins, some kind of strange spell falls over Vân Uoc, and suddenly, that boy is interested in her.

At this point, the story feels like it could fall into a number of problematic tropes. The poor immigrants’ daughter is loved by a white boy who has simply fallen under a spell. The implications of that whole thing are terrible.

Yet, as we discover through the course of the story, it’s not a spell or any magical thinking that draws Vân Uoc’s crush toward her. It’s real, genuine interest. Vân Uoc, it turns out, is the one who has begun overthinking and overcomplicating relationships, and it’s not only with this boy. It’s with her parents, it’s with her friends, and it’s with other people who she interacts with regularly. This mirrors something we discover at a crucial turning point in the story: Vân Uoc’s mother and her sister have been estranged for many, many years, and it’s Vân Uoc’s mother who has overthought the reasons their relationship became what it was.

The book is not perfect. It relies on some secondary character development too much from the other books set in this world, and there are times when the way Vân Uoc talks about romance and feelings felt a little over-the-top (that, I suspect, is my personal issue — I believe it to be true to the character’s voice). It’s not a bad book, but it’s not the knockout that Wood’s other reads have been for me.

I finished the story, and then I did what I tend to do for new and forthcoming YA books: I sought out the professional reviews. This is how Kirkus reviewed the book:

cloudwish review at Kirkus

My first reaction to the review, and the comment I made, was that it was harsh. There isn’t holding back on this, and the more I read the review, the more I disagreed with a number of aspects to it. Not that they were wrong; rather, I disagreed.

Nearly immediately, a number of women of color noted that the review was not “harsh.” And I’m glad they took the time to not just say this, but to explain why it was not harsh. As one woman said to me, the book messed up someone’s culture, and that hurt is hardly shown as harsh in the review.

Hearing this made me pause. They’re right. It’s not a harsh review.

It’s simply a review I find problems and disagreement with.

Kirkus Reviews, for anyone who isn’t aware, offers its critiques anonymously. This presents an opportunity to talk about books in a way that a signed review may not. Kirkus has a reputation for being sharp and being honest, two reasons why I find Kirkus to be such a great resource.

The problem, though, is not knowing who the reviewer is or what their expertise is without it being laid out in some capacity.

And, if I’m being fair, that’s not a problem at all.

The problem lies in the eyes of the readers, like me, who default to white. Who not only default to white, but who then expect explanation for the reviews as they stand.

As I’ve learned through social media, the reviewer of Cloudwish is Vietnamese American. She has an expertise by her own cultural heritage. She was given this book for review in part because of that, which is a wildly smart move on Kirkus’s part. That information about the reviewer, however, is privileged. I don’t know it and you don’t know it unless you know the reviewer or you’ve been told.

Which turns back to the problem above: readers like me who default to white not only will default to white, but then we want explanation and a defense of why a reviewer chooses to point out what they do and criticize it. That’s unfair on every level, and it’s a huge problem with trade reviews, period.

I feel privileged to know the reviewer is Vietnamese American and I feel privileged to have been told that my take on the review being harsh was explained to me. No one owes me that, and indeed, I feel lucky to have the capacity to ask women (and men!) of color for input and feedback on books, as well as feel lucky to read the smart critiques by these same people. The world is better for having so many places to seek out information and opinions and perspectives. That is exactly how we learn, how we grow, and how we better represent the world as whole.

Back to the Kirkus Review.

It feels unfair to see a review that equates Asian Americans — a huge, wide array of people and cultures and experiences and backgrounds — with Vietnamese Australians. The reviewer does something smart here in not centering the review on white readers, yet, it doesn’t touch upon the differences in racial relationships that exist in countries outside of America. Where these stories could be tropes in the US setting, they aren’t necessarily the same in an Australian setting.

There are, as of this writing, only two readily findable stories in YA that are about the immigrant Australian experience. Those are Cloudwish and the forthcoming Lucy & Lihn by Alice Pung (published in Australia as Laurinda). Pung is the daughter of immigrants herself and writes an #OwnVoices story, whereas Wood is not in the same position, but she writes having done significant research (as seen in interviews she’s done during the book’s Australian publication, as well as in her acknowledgements). It’s hard to wrestle with the ideas of what does or does not make a trope in storytelling when the stories that exist about a group of people are not abundant. It’s entirely possible that a story like Cloudwish resonates with Vietnamese Australians and provides a window into an immigrant experience unlike that of a Vietnamese American…or Asian Americans as a whole.

I’m also bothered by the idea the book was written with “a hidden diversity checklist.” Yes, there is diversity in this book, and yes, Vân Uoc’s friend is a lesbian. But these are teen girls who live in Melbourne, Australia. There’s not a stretch to the reality of what their lives look like here. And the conflict itself, while arguably tired in American-set stories, is arguably not so in a story set in Australia. Especially when these stories are not in abundance.

That all said, I appreciate this review notes the inconsistencies that exist in the story and think that that criticism is enormously helpful. Being unaware of cultural norms, knowing that honorifics were missing and that italics and language were inconsistent is worthwhile (both of those things, especially the second, are potentially fixable). These are things that any reviewer who knows anything about Vietnamese culture would know and things that an outsider like myself — and like the author — would and could miss.

So what of these conflicting thoughts and perspectives? What of the intersections that are wide and powerful and the ones which are tricky to navigate in nuanced ways?

The answer is: I don’t know.

But what I do know is this: there needs to be a bigger discussion about how we talk about diversity and inclusivity when it comes to criticism of books and representation. That first takes acknowledging one’s own biases and blinders and blunders. It requires creating a space where critics of color feel safe and comfortable laying out their problems with a given story and not only feeling safe, but feeling heard. The third is listening with respect on every side.

Reviewing and critically assessing literature is a skill and a talent, but it’s not something you necessarily get a degree or experience in in any way other than reading a lot and thinking about reading. Experts at reviewing children’s literature have a variety of backgrounds while holding on to the same goals: talking about what does and does not work in a book that’s being marketed for young readers. What separates those who review for trade journals from those who use a blogging platform to do the same thing is essentially word count and the end goal of the reviewer. What do they want to get from reviewing? Are they doing it for themselves? For a broad audience? For a specific audience?

In any case, there’s a problem with professional reviews. And it’s something that isn’t working on a number of levels: for the professionals reading the reviews (many of whom, like me, read those reviews being from white reviewers which is only one of many issues here), for the books being reviewed (and assumptions made about them or nuance missed within them or, in some cases, plain old factual stuff in the books being interpreted incorrectly or overlooked all together), for the reviewers (who are confined to a limited space to convey a lot of information), and, ultimately, the readers who do — or do not — have that book waiting for them on a shelf in a library or in a classroom.

Cloudwish was beta-read by a Vietnamese Canadian prior to being put into production on this side of the world. I’ve also read reviews and heard from other Vietnamese Canadians and Americans who have read the book who have given it a thumbs up. To them, it’s authentic and true. It’s a story they wanted to read. It’s a story they enjoyed reading and found to be solid in terms of representation. Solid being a way of saying just that: it’s solid. That doesn’t mean it’s perfect nor universal. But to these readers, it’s not harmful or painful.

Knowing that the same book was read by a Vietnamese American for a Kirkus review doesn’t change those reader’s opinions. But it does render the need to talk about the challenge of having the pressure of talking about representation put onto one person, writing a single review, attempting to speak for a wide swath of readers and through their own experiences. Will this book be purchased by libraries? Will it be overlooked because of a review like this, despite the readers who’ve picked it up and enjoyed it and identified with it and despite the fact that some of the criticism overlooks some nuances?

In a situation like this, everyone loses.

To turn the page a little bit, a number of online critics have been thoughtfully discussing When We Was Fierce and the problems of language and representation. Zetta Elliot has a great round-up of the discussion of the book, with links to reviews from readers and writers of color concerned about numerous things in the text. These have been some of the most thoughtful, extensive reviews I’ve read in a long time, offering great nuance to a discussion about a book that received at least one starred review from a trade journal.

And word came earlier this month that Candlewick, the book’s publisher, decided to postpone the book’s impending publication so the author (and presumably her editor) could work through the problems being discussed online.

The voices which spoke up were heard. Without their collective discussion and without their willingness to put their opinions on the line, openly and frankly, it’s possible this book would have never been seen through that light. Gatekeepers reading just the trade reviews would see a positive review and purchase the title, which would then be on the shelf for readers to access; the flaws, the very things many readers and critics of color found hurtful, would have been overlooked or ignored.

It wasn’t harsh for those critics to share their opinion. It was vital that they did so. The ultimately outcome is unknown at this point, but the fact something happened is a step in the right direction.

Would the same have happened in a trade review, even if written by a reviewer of color, with 200 words?

I can’t say.

But what I can say is that I’ve seen online critics talk in depth about representation that has hurt them personally and seen them be torn to shreds, even years after posting their criticism. The books they’ve been hurt by are the same books that received glowing reviews in trade journals, earned numerous awards, and continue to be reprinted, repackaged, and referenced over and over again as essential literature for young readers.

Change needs to happen, and it needs to be throughout the entire system. We need more spaces for critics of color to feel safe sharing their experiences with a book, as much as we need to understand how the system of reviews as a whole works — or doesn’t. We need self-awareness of the problem from every angle, and those of us who are white need to take the time to assess where and how we’re approaching criticism. What is it that bothers us in a review we read? Is it something the reviewer said, something about the way they said it, or is it something that we brought to the review ourselves?

What I do know is this: explicitly stating the race of characters in a review isn’t the way to change what a review does or says. It’s a first step, or maybe even half a step, in acknowledging the problematic nature of our culture’s tendency to default to white. Much more needs to be done, and much of that work falls upon those of us who are in positions of power via our careers, our voices, and our skin tones, to be better. More, we need to work together to do this. It’s not enough to call for diversity; it’s about acting in accordance to the world around us and considering the implications of each and every one of our words, our stories, and our perceptions.

 

 

Filed Under: criticism, review, Reviews

Ivory and Bone by Julie Eshbaugh

August 10, 2016 |

ivory and bone eshbaughPrehistoric fiction is hard to come by, even in the adult world. If you go looking for it in the YA world, it’s like digging for mammoth bones – not easy to unearth. My induction into the world of Jean M. Auel as a high schooler thanks to my local library’s used book sale has guaranteed that whenever a novel set in prehistoric times pops up, it shoots to the top of my to-read list. Enter Ivory and Bone by Julie Eshbaugh.

The marketing material says Eshbaugh’s story is based on Pride and Prejudice, and it is – loosely. Like any good re-telling, the reader doesn’t need to know the source material to enjoy this prehistoric take, though it is fun to puzzle out who is the analog of whom while reading (it’s mostly gender-swapped, for starters, which is a fun change). In the end, though, the correlation is so superficial that you’ll do yourself a disservice by expecting Ivory and Bone to be a true riff of Austen. It’s not.

The precise moment in prehistory is never stated, though we’re given clues: mammoths and ice are both growing scarcer, and the wiser human clans have started supplementing their leaner meat diets with the new plants that are growing in greater abundance. The people use stone tools, spears, and kayaks and wear animal skins. There are no Neanderthals like in Auel’s books. These clues place Ivory and Bone in the Neolithic period at the end of the Stone Age, though I couldn’t ever pinpoint where exactly on Earth the characters were supposed to be. (I’m sure a more attentive reader than me could figure it out!)

Kol, our protagonist and narrator, lives in this long-ago world, where survival is hard and meeting someone outside your own clan is rare. That latter bit is especially important for Kol and his younger siblings, since there are no other young people in their clan and their parents worry they won’t be able to find mates, the only way to ensure the continuation of the clan. Then Mya, her sister, and her brother – the leader of a separate clan – come to speak with leaders of Kol’s clan. Something happened between Mya’s clan and Kol’s clan a couple of years ago, and Kol doesn’t know the details, but it seems Mya’s brother wants to make amends. The circumstances have made Mya very cold to Kol, though Mya’s sister and Kol’s brother hit it off immediately. For a bit, it seems like the two clans might have formed an alliance.

Until Lo, a girl from another clan, arrives. From the start, it’s clear that Lo and Mya have their own history. Kol can’t help but be drawn to Lo, who has a magnetic sort of personality and an undeniable ability to make people follow her lead. Readers who know the basics of Pride and Prejudice will recognize Lo as Mr. Wickham, so it’s not difficult to figure out that Lo is up to no good, but the exact circumstances of her estrangement from Mya and her plans for Kol’s clan remain mysterious up until about 2/3rds of the way through the novel, where it begins to really diverge from its source material.

Part of the reason I love prehistoric novels so much is that we know so little about that time. It gives the writer a lot of free reign, if they have the imagination for it. So while the first part of the book doesn’t have much action, it reads very quickly. Like Pride and Prejudice, much is said with looks and pauses, and much is misinterpreted. During Mya and Kol’s not-quite-courtship, Eshbaugh expands upon Kol’s Stone Age world, giving us those little details that fans of historical fiction crave: what family structures were like, what people ate, how people hunted, what people slept on, what was considered an appropriate gift, and so on. It’s all worked into the story of Kol and Mya getting to know each other – or forming incorrect opinions about what they think the other is like. And when Lo enters the story, the novel changes tone, and we’re given action and not a little amount of blood.

Eshbaugh took a risk with how she chose to tell her story: the majority is second-person POV, with Kol narrating to Mya. So instead of saying “Mya did this,” he says “You did this,” which I found jarring. This technique isn’t quite successful; it took me out of the story a lot and interrupted the smoothness of the narrative when I read “you” instead of “she” or “Mya.” I got accustomed to it a bit by the end of the book, but not entirely. Still, I admire the choice to try something fresh, and it does add another layer to Kol’s and Mya’s relationship that would not be there with a more traditional narrative style.

Eshbaugh’s writing is simple, but in the way poetry can be, revealing more in what it doesn’t say. It also feels true to Kol’s, who is a teenager without the benefit of a written language, since such a thing did not exist yet (at least as far as we’ve been able to discover). The story is completely immersive, taking the reader fully into this world that Eshbaugh has created from a combination of her own extensive research and her imagination. It’s fascinating and unlike almost anything else currently published for teens, both in terms of its story and its narrative techniques. Hand this one to teens looking for something different, whether it’s a fresh take on an old tale, a time period we don’t often read about, or a writing style that tries something new. Highly recommended.

Filed Under: Historical Fiction, Reviews, ya fiction, Young Adult, young adult fiction

A Wicked Thing by Rhiannon Thomas

July 25, 2016 |

wicked thing thomasI don’t think I’ll ever get tired of fairy tale retellings. I loved the premise for Rhiannon Thomas’ A Wicked Thing, which focuses on what happens after Sleeping Beauty wakes to find that 100 years have passed and everyone she knew is dead – oh, and she’s supposed to marry the stranger who woke her up.

Aurora’s happily ever after doesn’t start when the prince kisses her. Rather, she’s bewildered by the fact that everyone believes he is her true love, since that was never a part of the story she knew. The story has been embellished over the 100 years she’s been sleeping, and now everyone expects her to marry the prince and help stabilize the kingdom, which has seen many, many kings since Aurora pricked her finger. The current king and queen essentially put her under house arrest, giving her no choice in the matter.

The royal family aren’t the only ones who want to use Aurora for their own ends. There’s a visiting prince who suggests another path for Aurora, but she’s not sure it’s the right one either. She meets a revolutionary boy who wants to overthrow the king (who is quite heavy-handed in his villainy) and use Aurora to help make that happen. And then there’s the evil witch who cursed her in the first place, who has her own designs on Aurora. She’s being pulled in so many directions and she’s not sure she can trust anyone – only herself.

Thomas does a good job portraying just how alone Aurora feels. No doubt many people who know the original or Disney story of Sleeping Beauty have wondered how Aurora must have handled the realization that her entire family and all her friends are dead, and Thomas provides a good explanation. There’s a little bit of magic beyond the initial curse here, too (the “wicked thing” reference in the title), that I felt was a little underdeveloped. Ultimately, the main conflict is what Aurora will decide to do – who will she side with? Is there anyone she can ally with who wants what is best for her, not just to use her to accomplish their own goals? Is it possible for her to have any true friends?

The path Aurora eventually chooses is the only right one, and I was satisfied by it, though it does leave things a bit open-ended. Luckily, there is a sequel! I wouldn’t call this an outstanding example of a fairy tale retelling, but it’s an intriguing one, it’s competently written, and it should satisfy most readers. I look forward to seeing where Thomas takes Aurora next.

Filed Under: fairy tales, Fantasy, Reviews, Uncategorized, Young Adult

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