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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
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      • Data & Stats
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      • Book Riot
    • Readers Advisory Week
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September Debut YA Novels

September 18, 2013 |

Ready for this month’s debut YA novels? We’ve been keeping track of debut novels throughout the year, and you can get to past roundups by starting in our August post and working backwards. 

A note about the definition of the word “debut.” I am strict in applying it — these are first-time works by first-time authors, unless otherwise noted. I don’t include first-time YA works by authors who have published in other categories. I don’t include YA authors who have changed their names (I’ve seen a number of lists including books that are by authors who have published in YA previously but who are writing under a pen name or have married and changed their publication name). The books included are debuts in the truest sense of the word.

If I am missing a debut novel by a traditional publisher out in September, let me know in the comments. All descriptions are via WorldCat unless otherwise notes. 

Not a Drop to Drink by Mindy McGinnis: Sixteen-year-old Lynn will do anything to protect her valuable water source, but the arrival of new neighbors forces her to reconsider her attitudes.

Relativity by Cristin Bishara: If Ruby Wright could have her way, her dad would never have met and married her stepmother Willow, her best friend George would be more than a friend, and her mom would still be alive. Then she discovers a tree in the middle of an Ohio cornfield with a wormhole to nine alternative realities. But is there such a thing as a perfect world? What is Ruby willing to give up to find out?

Thin Space by Jody Casella: Consumed by guilt and secrets about his twin brother’s death, Marsh Windsor is looking for a thin space–a place where the barrier between this world and the next is thin enough for a person to cross over–in hopes of setting things right.

Find Me by Romily Bernard: When teen hacker and foster child Wick Tate finds a dead classmate’s diary on her front step, with a note reading “Find me,” she sets off on a perverse game of hide-and-seek to catch the killer.

Project Cain by Geoffrey Girard: Fifteen-year-old Jeff Jacobson learns that not only was he cloned from infamous serial killer Jeffrey Dahmer’s blood as part of a top-secret government experiment, but there are other clones like him and he is the only one who can track them down before it is too late.

The Paradox of Vertical Flight by Emil Ostrovski: When, on his eighteenth birthday, Jack Polovsky’s almost-suicide is interrupted by his ex-girlfriend Jess’s call saying she is in labor, he impulsively snatches the baby and hits the road with his best friend Tommy and Jess to introduce baby Socrates to Jack’s aging grandmother.

All Our Yesterdays by Cristin Terrill: Em must travel back in time to prevent a catastrophic time machine from ever being invented, while Marina battles to prevent the murder of the boy she loves. 

Leap of Faith by Jamie Blair: Seventeen-year-old Faith shepherds her neglectful, drug-addicted mother through her pregnancy and then kidnaps the baby, taking on the responsibility of being her baby sister’s parent while hiding from the authorities.

Relic by Renee Collins: After a raging fire consumes her town and kills her parents, Maggie Davis is on her own to protect her younger sister and survive best she can in the Colorado town of Burning Mesa. In Maggie’s world, the bones of long-extinct magical creatures such as dragons and sirens are mined and traded for their residual magical elements, and harnessing these relics’ powers allows the user to wield fire, turn invisible, or heal even the worst of injuries. Working in a local saloon, Maggie befriends the spirited showgirl Adelaide and falls for the roguish cowboy Landon. But when she proves to have a particular skill at harnessing the relics’ powers, Maggie is whisked away to the glamorous hacienda of Álvar Castilla, the wealthy young relic baron who runs Burning Mesa. Though his intentions aren’t always clear, Álvar trains Maggie in the world of relic magic. But when the mysterious fires reappear in their neighboring towns, Maggie must discover who is channeling relic magic for evil before it’s too late. (Description via Goodreads). 

This is How I Find Her by Sara Polsky: High school junior Sophie has always had the burden of taking care of her mother, who has bipolar disorder, but after her mother’s hospitalization she must learn to cope with estranged family and figure out her own life.

A Wounded Name by Dot Hutchison: A reimagining of the world and story of Hamlet–from Ophelia’s perspective and set in an American boarding school.

Filed Under: debut authors, Uncategorized, Young Adult

Literary Inspirations: YA Characters Hooked on Inspiration

September 17, 2013 |

Did you have a book or an author who inspired you significantly when you were a teenager? I suspect even as adults, there are those authors and books who hold a big place in your heart for what it is they’ve written that you’ve just connected with strongly. These are the words and stories we think about all of the time and that sometimes, we use to guide our own decisions and paths because we believe in them so much. 

I love seeing this homage trend play out in YA fiction. It’s something I’ve kept a small list on, and it’s something I’d love to explore more of. Note that these are not books where the story or characters are modeled after other works of literature (so books like April Lindner’s Catherine don’t fit); these are instead books where the character has had a strong connection to or bond with an author or book. These are stories where the character’s passion for a particular book or author is one of their defining characteristics. 

Below is my (somewhat short) list of books that do that, with descriptions from WorldCat. I welcome additions to this list in any genre — my knowledge tends to fall to contemporary/realistic, but I know there are plenty of books outside this arena that have characters deeply devoted to a specific book or author. 

And Then Things Fall Apart by Arlaina Tibensky — an obsession with Sylvia Plath’s The Bell Jar. Reviewed here. 


Devastated by her parents’ decision to split up, pressured by her boyfriend to have sex, and saddled with a case of chicken pox, fifteen-year-old Keek finds consolation in her beloved, well-worn copy of Sylvia Plath’s “The Bell Jar.”

Emily’s Dress and Other Missing Things by Kathryn Burak — an obsession with all things Emily Dickinson. Reviewed here. 

A new girl in Amherst, Massachusetts, comes to terms with her mother’s suicide and her best friend’s disappearance with the help of Emily Dickinson’s poetry–and her dress.

Dr. Bird’s Advice for Sad Poets by Evan Roskos — an obsession with all things Walt Whitman. Reviewed here.

A sixteen-year-old boy wrestling with depression and anxiety tries to cope by writing poems, reciting Walt Whitman, hugging trees, and figuring out why his sister has been kicked out of the house.

Kiss the Morning Star by Elissa Janine Hoole — a road trip spurred by Jack Kerouac’s The Dharma Bums. Reviewed here.

The summer after high school graduation and one year after her mother’s tragic death, Anna and her long-time best friend Kat set out on a road trip across the country, armed with camping supplies and a copy of Jack Kerouac’s Dharma Bums, determined to be open to anything that comes their way. 

Being Henry David by Cal Armistead — an obsession with Henry David Thoreau and Walden Pond.

Seventeen-year-old ‘Hank,’ who can’t remember his identity, finds himself in Penn Station with a copy of Thoreau’s Walden as his only possession and must figure out where he’s from and why he ran away.

Can you think of other YA books that fall into this category? I’d love to know more.

Filed Under: book lists, Uncategorized, Young Adult

Thin Space by Jody Casella

September 16, 2013 |

I’m a little torn on putting up a spoiler alert for my review of Thin Space — yes, I plan on going into territory that could ruin major plot points in the book. That said, the jacket copy for the book completely ruins the twist right in it. I hadn’t read the jacket copy before I dove in, but about half way through reading, I flipped the book over and gave it a read.

The twist was ruined for me. And while it didn’t ruin my reading experience, it was incredibly disappointing to have it spelled out right there on cover copy for me. Perhaps it won’t spoil the story for all readers. The reason it did for me was that the title likened to Casella’s book is one I am familiar with, and therefore, I knew immediately what was going to happen. 

Which is to say, there are spoilers in this review, but you are going to be spoiled reading jacket copy, too. At least that was the case on the ARC — I hope that the finished copy doesn’t have that major spoiler on it. Proceed as you wish.

Marsh’s twin brother died in a car accident a few months ago; Marsh was the driver. It was only a couple months following that when Mrs. Hansel, Marsh’s neighbor, died. She was the older woman that Marsh and brother Austin used to do community service for, and she was the one who introduced the boys to the concept of the thin space — the portal where souls enter and leave the body, where it’s possible to traverse time and space and be reunited with those who’ve passed on. Now that both Austin and Mrs. Hansel are gone, Marsh has become the crazy kid, looking for this thin space.

He’s convinced there is a thin space in Mrs. Hansel’s old home, since she was born there and died there. 

The grief consumes Marsh, and he’s finding himself acting out of character. He’s being aggressive, getting involved in altercations, wandering around barefoot, careless. When Mrs. Hansel’s home is sold to a new family, he finds himself making quick friends with Maddie, one of the new kids who moved in. He’s not so much taken with her in a romantic sense; he knows that getting to know Maddie means he can get into the house and seek out this thin space. 

Of course, he begins to fall for her. It’s slow but earned. However, it’s not without complications — Logan, Marsh’s girlfriend, isn’t ready for them to break up. And it’s not entirely clear whether or not Marsh is ready for that relationship to end either. Because that relationship reminds him of Austin and Austin’s relationship with Katie. The four of them would double date.

The four of them had been on a double date the night Austin died.

Little by little, Marsh opens up to Maddie, though, and he learns that she, too, is dealing with loss in her life. That she, too, would love to find a thin space to reconnect with her departed father. And the night that Mrs. Golden, school counselor, wanders into Maddie’s house on the promise of delivering treats, Maddie discovers that the counselor is also looking for the thin space. And she has found it.

And then, the marvelous, smart, savvy twist occurs — skip down a paragraph if you don’t want it. See, Marsh isn’t Marsh. In fact, that’s the bigger point of the story: Marsh really hated being a twin. He despised the fact it was so easy for him and Austin to be confused with one another, for them to be seen as the same person, despite being so different from one another. It was easy to trick Logan and Katie into believing Marsh was Austin and vice versa. And the night of the double date at the movie theater — the night of the accident — the boys had gone all the way in their identity swapping. Austin assumed the role of Marsh and Marsh, the role of Austin. So when Marsh discovers the thin space with Maddie, what happens is the true unravels: Marsh is actually Austin, and the dead twin is actually Marsh. Everything that Marsh had lived and experienced post-Austin’s death had actually been Austin living as Marsh instead. Because even the boys couldn’t separate their own selves from one another, and the weight of grief — not just of the loss, but the grief in knowing that the truth would further harm relationships and the people who loved the boys — kept Austin from telling everyone about their own history of deception.

The writing here is good, and the pacing is spot-on. The story kept me hooked and eager to see how much Marsh would reveal and how much he’d hold back. I wanted to know what would happen, what could change, the moment he got to see Austin through the thin space. The story was wholly satisfying and solid, and it’ll appeal big time to readers who loved the parallel worlds of Emily Hainsworth’s Through to You, as well as those who love the whats-real-what’s-supernatural elements of Nova Ren Suma’s books. While it is not as lush in the writing aspect, it is similarly structured in plot. This is a book that tiptoes the line and begs the reader to wonder whether or not there is a thin space or whether or not that thin space is simply a matter of narrative choice of truth vs deception.

I see this being really popular with readers who love ghost stories, who love stories about grief and mourning, and who like there to be just a tiny touch of romance. This isn’t about finding and falling in love with someone else. It’s about finding and appreciating the love that’s already around you and coming to terms with what it is you have to do to maintain and sustain it. For Marsh, it meant games of truth and games of deceit. For Marsh, it’s about dealing with grief in its many ugly, confusing, frustrating forms. Jody Casella’s Thin Space is satisfying, well-written, and compelling, with loads of reader appeal. I really look forward to seeing what she writes next. 

Thin Space is available now. Review copy received from the publisher. 

Filed Under: review, Reviews, Uncategorized, Young Adult

YA in the Witness Protection Program: A Reading List

September 10, 2013 |

A recent microtrend I noticed lately is an odd one, but it’s one that’s been present in YA books for years: the witness protection program. Because its recent emergence in a number of titles has me fascinated (why so many at once?), I thought it’d be worth looking at the trend over time. We’ll start with the most recent, as well as a forthcoming title or two, then I’ll call out back list titles — and classics of YA — which feature the witness protection program in some capacity.

All descriptions come from WorldCat, unless otherwise noted. If I missed any titles I should know about, leave ’em in the comments. All of my titles are YA, but I would be interested in adult titles with YA crossover appeal that feature this as well. I suspect there are a number of great genre titles, particularly in the mystery/thriller arena, that feature witness protection and have appeal to teen readers. 

Conjured by Sarah Beth Durst: Haunted by disturbing dreams and terrifying visions, a teenaged girl in a paranormal witness protection program must remember her past and why she has strange abilities before a magic-wielding serial killer hunts her down.

The Rules for Disappearing by Ashley Elston: High school student “Meg” has changed identities so often that she hardly knows who she is anymore, and her family is falling apart, but she knows that two of the rules of witness protection are be forgettable and do not make friends–but in her new home in Louisiana a boy named Ethan is making that difficult.

Shadowlands by Kate Brian: Rory, a girl in witness protection, thinks the serial killer she turned in has found her and is killing people around her. But as she investigates, she discovers a dark, disturbing truth about her new hometown 

Don’t Look Behind You by Lois Duncan: Seventeen-year-old April finds her comfortable life changed forever when death threats to her father, a witness in a federal case, force her family to go into hiding under assumed names and flee the pursuit of a hired killer.

See Jane Run by Hannah Jayne (January 2014): Riley Spencer never thought twice about keeping secrets from her parents, but when she finds a birth certificate with the name Jane O’Callahan hidden in her baby book, she must consider that her parents are lying to her.

When I Was Joe by Keren David: After Ty and his mother are placed in a witness protection program because he can identify his friend’s murderers, he finds himself adjusting, but when his grandmother is hurt in a deliberate attack designed to get him to return to London, he knows he must make a choice.

Fake ID by Lamar Giles (January 2014): An African-American teen in the Witness Protection Program moves to a new town and finds himself trying to solve a murder mystery when his first friend is found dead. 

By Any Other Name by Laura Jarratt: Holly is fifteen years old, but she’s only been “Holly” for a matter of months. Because of something that happened, she and her family have had to enter witness protection and have all assumed new identities. Starting at a new school mid-term is hard enough at the best of times, and Holly has no clue who she is any more.

Hush by Jacqueline Woodson: Twelve-year-old Toswiah finds her life changed when her family enters the witness protection program.

Safe House by James Heneghan: Northern Ireland. In 1999, one year after the Good Friday peace accord, sectarian violence still runs rampant in Belfast and the hatred between Protestant and Catholic runs deep. Liam’s father is a peacemaker to the Catholic community. When his parents are brutally murdered, Liam is forced to run for his life. Taken to a police safe house, Liam is betrayed and forced to run again, from the very people who are supposed to be protecting him.

The Unprotected Witness by James Stevenson: After the murder of his father, who has been hiding under the Witness Protection Program, Pete finds himself the target of sinister men who seem to think he knows where a large sum of money is hidden.

Tunnel Vision by Susan Shaw: After witnessing her mother’s murder, sixteen-year-old high school student Liza Wellington and her father go into the witness protection program.

Filed Under: book lists, Uncategorized, Young Adult

Fangirl by Rainbow Rowell

September 9, 2013 |

I’m going to go ahead and say from the start that Rainbow Rowell’s Fangirl didn’t work for me and that in order to explain why that’s the case, this review will be spoiler heavy. I don’t think any of the spoilers will ruin the reading for anyone who picks up the book at all, but I also want to be fair in giving that head’s up. 

Cather and sister Wren are beginning their first year of college at the University of Nebraska in Lincoln — a few hours west of their home town of Omaha — and while Wren is excited for the experience, Cath couldn’t be dreading it more. Not only does it mean adjustment, but it also means that she’s going to have less time to devote to the fandom. That was and is her biggest passion. 

Cath writes fanfic about Simon Snow, the fictional lead character of a series of wildly popular children’s books (think Harry Potter). But she not only writes it; she’s well-known and popular as a fanfic writer, and she’s earned legions of fans who eagerly await her next installment of the story she’s developed between Simon and secondary male character Baz. She’s built herself a world all her own in the fandom. 

But while Fandom about fandom and fanfiction, it’s really not just about that. Cath has to learn to navigate begin in a new place, in a roommate situation that has her learning to adjust to the quirks and charms of a new roommate who isn’t Wren. Because Wren doesn’t want to live with her. Wren wants something new. Wren may or may not have a few problems of her own drinking, for one, which causes her to end up in the hospital one night. Wren’s also been known to be friendly with more than a single boy, too. In other words, she’s a bit like a stereotypical college freshman who is indulging in her first taste of freedom and adulthood. She’s exploring, making choices — even if they aren’t always good for her. 

Then there’s Levi, the cute-haired boy who may or may not be in a relationship with Cath’s roommate Reagan. Then there’s Cath’s father, who suffers from depression at home. Then there’s Cath and Wren’s mother who stepped out of their lives years ago — it was that departure of her mother that led Cath to the fandom in the first place. And then there’s the advanced-level Fiction-Writing course that Cath was let into and that she’s managed to earn an incomplete in (though thankfully, her professor wants to give her an extension and a second chance since she shows real promise). There’s the boy she’s been partnered with in the class, too, who may or may not be stealing Cath’s writing and passing it off as his. 

Can Cath possibly continue her streak with the fandom? Can she come to terms with who she is in the midst of the fandom? Or does she need to come to terms with herself in spite of it? And what happens if people are on to her? With scads of fans, someone on campus HAS to know she’s the person behind Carry On.

Over the course of this single freshman year in Cath’s life — one which we’re reminded again and again drags on like a lifetime in a way that no other year does — so much and so little happens at the same time. We’re given passages between the chapters of Cath’s story that showcase the original Simon Snow text and the fanfic that Cath herself has written. 

Except.

We don’t actually get to see the fandom. 

We see Cath’s writing, but in no way does Cath’s writing actually showcase the importance of the fandom to her nor her notoriety within the fandom. We know OF the people who admire her work and seek it out. But we don’t know them. And we don’t know the value of them to her because we never actually see it. Instead, we’re giving the very superficial elements of it — the writing itself. The heft of meaning here is removed because we’re told, not shown, what it is. 

What Rowell does in Fangirl is offer too many unsatisfying plot threads on a very shallow level, and it’s presented in such a way that Cath herself is never a complete character. There’s not only a lack of an arc to her (again, we know OF things because it’s told to readers, but we don’t actually know them because we don’t get to see or experience them along with Cath), but her character is inconsistent. She’s unlikable and not in a way that’s actually interesting. She’s cold and aloof, and she’s judgmental. Obviously these elements make her real and they make her relatable in many ways (I saw a lot of myself in Cath and many others will too — particularly the inconsistencies, the anxieties, and the sometimes-borderline paranoia she experiences in her new world) but she never is able to give us more than a passing glance at why she is this way. 

She just is. 

In many ways, the exploration of fandom is meant to give us further insight into Cath and her behavior except it never does. Where we could get to know her through her fanfic — just like her followers do — we don’t get to because she never shares with us why she continues to seek and validate her own identity through it. 

We see the fiction. We don’t see the heart.

I never bought the romance or chemistry between Cath and Levi because I never saw her actually seeing him as someone more than simply his good hair and his always-there presence. He does a lot of nice things for her, but she never seems all that into it. In many ways, she almost expects it. It was surprising to me he continued to seek her out when she was so cold and distant. And it doubly surprised me that she had TWO boys who were interested in her. 

Maybe part of the problem is we never know the stakes here. Are there any? At least in Cath’s own world, there really aren’t. If she gives up the fandom, she loses personal fulfillment. But she would find it at college because there is a world of college to fulfill her. If she’s found out as being a huge fanfic writer, what happens? She earns notoriety on campus — and there is no possible way that there are not other fans of Simon Snow on campus who wouldn’t seek her out to develop some sort of social group around their shared passion. 

This leads me to the biggest issues in the book, which are the underdeveloped plot points that could have been either dug into further or left out all together. Did Cath and Wren’s father need to be seriously unstable? It makes sense, but the turn around and recovery is near-instant. One minute he’s hospitalized, and not too long later, he’s stable and fine. Likewise, why the sudden reemergence of mom? It seems out of left field that mom would want to suddenly know her girls again, after being out of their entire teen lives. And the turnaround there is also instant. While it’s believable so much could and does happen in a year, the way these two events played out was superficial and because they’re so big and complex, the surface-level treatment makes them easy to write off. 

Wren develops a drinking problem in college, and it’s when she’s hospitalized that Cather finally has to come face to face with the mom she’s been avoiding (and frankly, I was team Cath here on completely avoiding the mother who was out of her life, even though the story read in a way that suggested she should feel guilty and bad about not wanting to reestablish that connection). Since Cath and Wren aren’t living together, there’s been a giant wedge driven between them at school — almost to the point they don’t even know one another. But we never get to know Wren except through Cath’s skewed perception, and it’s this one-sided, weak development that in many ways is how Cath herself is propped up as a character. Wren drinks. Wren sleeps with boys. Wren gets hospitalized. Cath, on the other hand, lives in her head, in her fanfic, avoids social interaction, and nothing “bad” happens to her. But with the hospitalization, their relationship is patched up because they’re able to “bond” over their thoughts about having mom back in their lives. It’s a way-too-cleanly-resolved scene that begged for much more development — or for being left out all together. 

So with all of that going on, there’s another wrench thrown in, and that is that Levi has a learning disorder where he is unable to read. He needs to listen to people reading to him in order to grasp knowledge. 

If you’re keeping tally at this point, we have the mentally ill father, the absent-but-seeking-connection mother, the sisters who are drifting apart, the sister with a drinking problem, the boy from her fiction class who may be stealing her writing, the teacher who is a stock character that “believes in Cath’s potential as a writer,” and the potential boyfriend who has a learning disorder. None of these threads alone are bad. It’s when they’re all thrown into one story — even if it’s meant to be a way of explaining how freshman year at college can feel like an eternity — that things become unbelievable. They’re shallowly developed and unsatisfying. But worse, they don’t contribute anything to Cath’s character arc.

As mentioned earlier, Cath is inconsistent in the story. She’s at one minute very “worldly” — she talks about how she grew up in the most culturally-rich, ethnically-diverse area of Omaha and she quickly judges her school not for her because of how many blonde, white girls wander around. But then down the road, she talks about how she doesn’t know what a ranch is nor does she have any concept of country life. Yes, Omaha is a city. However, Omaha is saddled between Nebraska and Iowa, which base their livelihoods on farming and ranching. If she’s so rich culturally, it’s shocking to see what she does and doesn’t know. She’s sheltered but she’s not. She writes gay fanfic, which suggests an open-mindedness to her, but she IS so judgmental externally — she’s near shaming people who choose to enjoy sex and she makes a rape joke early on with Levi that felt inappropriate at the moment and even more inappropriate as their relationship actually develops. And her voice and perspective doesn’t change. It’s one-dimensional.

What of fandom here, then? I’m left wondering if Rowell’s point that fandom can be positive and fulfilling and exciting is actually lost here and whether or not she unintentionally makes the opposite point because she doesn’t allow readers to see what it adds to Cath’s life. We only know the surface. We never know the depth, even though we know there is depth (and how I wanted that depth — I don’t know fandom, but I know the value it has added to many people’s lives and…why wasn’t that here?). Likewise, the passages of Simon Snow and the fanfic were, frankly, boring. Again, it goes back to the fact we don’t know what the fandom is to Cath or what she’s getting from it. So I wasn’t sure what I was supposed to be getting from it either. It read a bit like creatively-packaged info dumping.

Part of me wonders if there is an in-crowd to this book. Because I’m not in the fandom, because I don’t read fanfiction, am I just an outsider to it? If I don’t “get” it without seeing it, is the book not meant for me as a reader? That seems like a huge and unfair leap — and I doubt that’s the intention here. But I can’t help feeling like because I’m not one of the cool crowd — that I’m not Cath or like Cath — then, well, too bad. 

The editor of this book called it “Literature with a capital L” in her buzz session at BEA, but I couldn’t disagree more. This isn’t spectacular writing. At times, it’s clumsy and awkward, and there are lengthy passages which don’t add anything to the story. There’s nothing Literary here. And that’s not to suggest there’s not a readership to this book (there certainly is!) nor that the writing is bad (it’s not). Rather, it’s to say this is no Literature. The story is told through third person point of view, which almost makes the writing tougher to buy as literary because we’re not getting it direct from Cath herself. There’s a step back and a removal from the immediacy of story. So the weak turns of phrase aren’t actually because it’s who Cath is or how she receives and perceives her world first-hand.

I’d hoped for a more open ending, one which would suggest that things aren’t neatly packaged nor wrapped up, but I got the neat bow. It in many ways is precisely what Cath said she hoped to deliver to her own readers, and while it could have been satisfying for the readers of Fangirl to get it, because there are so many plot threads too neatly tied up already, it was more of a let down that a satisfying resolution. 

Though this book is being sold as YA — and it will certainly appeal to a lot of teen readers and YA readers more broadly — this doesn’t read like a YA book. It reads like an adult book. It reminds me of chick lit, and that’s not meant in a mean or belittling sense. I spent a long time thinking about what would have made this YA as opposed to adult, and I think it comes down to this: the YA story here was how Cath got into the fandom after her mother’s sudden departure when she was a teenager. The YA of it would be seeing Cath find a safe space in this world and developing the friendships and connections she does in Simon Snow’s fan world. But instead, we get the well after in this book. We see Cath years after she’s developed this presence. We don’t see development therein. We don’t see a “coming of age” or “coming to understanding” of the value of this fandom because we don’t actually see the fandom or the world therein. We see Cath in her first year of college — a snap shot into her life — and we see the romance developing between her and Levi at the forefront. Again, not to belittle the story. It’s not. The YA book was elsewhere in the story, in those flash backs and in the back story. What we got was the adult book. 

There will be plenty of people who love this book and I see why. But this book and the writing are imperfect and left me with far more questions than answers — and not in the way I like to leave a story with questions. This left me wanting, rather than satiated. I’m sure those readers for whom this book is ideal and who “get” it will overlook the issues without problem. 

Pass Fangirl off to readers who want a story about fanfiction and fandom. Pass it off, too, to readers who want books set in college or about figuring out who and what you are when you’re put into a new situation. Readers who liked Rowell’s style and storytelling in Eleanor & Park will likely appreciate Fangirl as well. And, of course, this book is great for your adult readers who love YA. It’s an ideal crossover title. 

Fangirl will be available tomorrow, September 10, from St. Martin’s Press. Review copy received from the publisher. 

Filed Under: Reviews, Uncategorized, Young Adult

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