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The Program by Suzanne Young

June 13, 2013 |

In Sloane’s world, suicide is an epidemic among teenagers. No one knows why, but the adults have found a way to combat it: The Program. Teens who are suspected of succumbing to depression are forcibly taken by The Program and have any and all unpleasant memories wiped from their brains. They’re sent back weeks later, supposedly cured, but they’re not the same. They’ve lost the things that makes them who they are.

Sloane fears The Program every minute of every day. Her older brother committed suicide, and she knows she’s being watched for signs of depression. Luckily, she has her boyfriend, James, and they’ve pledged to help each other through these last few months until they turn 18 and The Program can’t touch them.

And then a friend of theirs kills himself, and James cracks. He’s taken by The Program. Sloane is despondent, and she knows when James returns, he won’t remember her at all. She has to concentrate on convincing the adults around her that she’s fine. She can’t show any emotion. She can’t express her grief. If she does, they’ll call for The Program. But it’s already too late – her parents have noticed she’s faking happiness and they’ve called The Program to take her away. Sloane is determined to find a way to maintain her identity while undergoing treatment, to not forget James and her brother and her friends, but what chance does she really stand?

Kimberly’s Thoughts

Young presents us with an intriguing premise, but I’m of two minds about it. I like that she tackles a real issue that teens struggle with daily. I like that it’s not sensationalized, and that the teens’ thoughts and feelings about the Program and their own depression are taken seriously and not trivialized. At the same time, I’m frustrated that there’s no explanation for the suicide “epidemic.” I wonder if treating depression like a communicable disease can come across as insensitive to teens who suffer from this very complex condition.

The book itself doesn’t really dig into the real causes of depression, which is part of the point. The Program is a band-aid, if that. But the fact that the causes aren’t investigated in any other way, that people refer to the suicides as an epidemic and treat it as “catching,” still does give me pause.

I also think the book suffers a little from an identity crisis. It could have been a thoughtful examination of the causes of suicide in teens and legitimate treatment plans, but it’s more about what shouldn’t be done than what should. It could have been a thrilling dystopian romp, but it doesn’t quite get there either. It’s a bit of a strange book, but for many readers, that will be a positive.

I did really like Young’s writing. The book held my attention (though the last third is a bit tedious for spoilery reasons) and I felt deeply for Sloane and her friends. Young writes their depression and fear very realistically. I think it reads a lot like a dystopia with a contemporary/realistic feel, and Young succeeds in writing about a really hard, issue-laden topic without making this an “issue book.”

Kelly’s Thoughts


I like to peruse reviews after I’ve given a book a good deal of thought, and one of the most interesting things I saw a few times about Young’s book was that it made light of issues like depression and suicide. I wonder how many people read the book too fast to pick up the fact that it actually aims to do the precise opposite of this. Which is why I liked this book.

Sloane lives in a world where those who are at risk of suicide — those who are too “emotional” about anything — are sent to The Program. The Program wipes the memories and emotionally-traumatic aspects of a person’s mind in order for them to return to the world with a different perspective. It thereby removes the threat that they’ll choose to kill themselves. In a world where suicide is an epidemic, it seems like a workable solution.

But what Young gets at in the book through Sloane is that a person is a person because of those things that are part of their lives. The good stuff as much as the bad stuff. So Sloane’s brother had committed suicide and the fear was that she’d become too emotional about it and thereby become a threat to herself. It’s a valid fear in this world, but it reduces feelings to a thing to “deal with,” rather than experience and work with. In other words, depression, anger, frustration — what the message is is that these things are exceptionally tough and they are exceptionally personal and they are what shapes and guides a person through making decisions and through understanding the world around them. By removing them in order to “better” someone, they’re removing those aspects that make a persona an individual. There’s no belittling depression at all. Instead, I think this book does a pretty good job of making it clear that depression is something to listen to and take seriously. It’s individual. There’s no one-size-fits-all treatment.

The Program succeeds on a take away for readers, and it succeeds in leaving me wanting to know what happens next. I’m eager to know what happens after. But the book doesn’t just succeed on the story telling level. I felt like the dialog, the romance, and the pacing were strong, and they made the book readable and engaging. Sloane and James are close to one another, and they look out for one another. The romance is sweet without being cloying or over the top. It’s very teen.

What didn’t quite work for me was how Sloane was treated at The Program, and I felt it didn’t work because I wanted more. There is an older “worker” at The Program who attempts to take advantage of Sloane, and I felt he was a little bit too much of a sketch, rather than a truly sketchy character. There was a ripe opportunity to delve into the world of authority and the messages of power and control, but it didn’t quite come to fruition. I also found the end to be a bit of a let down. Leila talks about it a little bit more in her review at Kirkus — it definitely let me down, despite the fact I am eager for the sequel.

This isn’t my first book by Young but I think it is by far her strongest, and it makes me excited to see where she’s going to go next. She writes real teens as real teens. These kids aren’t superheroes. They don’t have all of the answers. They make dumb choices. But in the end, they come away knowing more about themselves and have a desire to make things better not only for their future, but for the future of other teens like them. That’s what makes The Program the kind of book that so many teens will relate to. It’s one, too, that I think tackles the issues of depression and suicide very well and in a way that makes these very serious issues easier to grasp for readers who may have never experienced them first-hand. Because what happens when you aren’t allowed to experience what it is you need to feel? Or worse, what happens when you’re not allowed to experience what it is you feel just because you feel it, without necessarily having a logical reason for your response?

Filed Under: Reviews, Science Fiction, Uncategorized, Young Adult

Neptune’s Tears by Susan Waggoner

June 7, 2013 |

Have you ever finished a book, set it down, and thought to yourself “I liked that way more than it deserved?” Neptune’s Tears by Susan Waggoner is one of those books for me. It’s thin in all ways – not just page count – but it doesn’t stop the concept from being cool, and sometimes that’s enough for an enjoyable read.

Seventeen-year-old Zee lives in London in 2218. She’s training at a hospital to be an empath, a career choice that is still relatively new for her time. She has to be careful not to form any close emotional relationships herself, as it would interfere with the work she does helping patients repair their own emotional well-being.

But then. (You knew this was coming, right?) She meets a boy.

He’s not just any boy. He’s an alien – a very human-looking alien, but an alien nonetheless, one of a race who landed several years before and have managed to assimilate rather well. Actually, the first encounter was a bit of a letdown for most people, as the aliens themselves didn’t seem to have much of a plan other than studying Earth. Zee’s father remains convinced that the aliens have other intentions, and it’s made him obsessive and distant.

While the aliens didn’t bring much strife, Zee’s future world is far from utopian (though this is emphatically not a dystopia). It’s plagued by anarchist terrorists who set off shock bombs without warning and kill swaths of people at a time – without even realizing they’ve been hit. And the world is divided on the aliens, of course. Zee herself is resentful of them due to the way her father reacted to them, so her attraction to handsome alien David is very unwelcome.

And yet, she can’t help but seek out his company, and the two fall in love. Then it becomes clear that David has a few secrets, and Zee’s empathic powers begin to grow stronger and morph into something newer and rarer. Everything culminates in a deadly anarchist attack, when Zee learns the secrets David has been hiding and her world is upended.

There’s a twist at the end, and it’s abrupt and unexpected, barely telegraphed at all. It also leaves the book on a bit of a cliffhanger, though many readers probably won’t care (that it’s unresolved or enough to read a sequel, to be honest). It also makes the book about something completely different than initially expected (in much the same way that the twist in R. J. Anderson’s Ultraviolet did. Readers may have the same feelings about it, too – either very excited or very betrayed).

This is a short book, and it suffers for it, I think. Characterization is pretty thin, and the plot doesn’t go much of anywhere (until the very end, of course). I wouldn’t call it a frothy, fun read either, though. It’s just a bit dull, despite the intriguing premise.

That said, I certainly enjoyed it. The short length helped, as I didn’t have much time to get bored before I had finished it. And I really dug Waggoner’s ideas, though they weren’t executed particularly well. I like the idea of empaths as healers in a science fiction rather than a fantasy setting. There are also a few intriguing details of this future world sprinkled throughout, including a lovely background story that explains the title. Even the anarchist terrorists seem a bit different from the usual fare with their choice of weapon. Little bits like this hint at real creativity and a story that never really comes into its own.

Review copy received from the publisher. Neptune’s Tears will be published June 25.

Filed Under: Reviews, Science Fiction, Uncategorized, Young Adult

Absent by Katie Williams

June 4, 2013 |

Fair warning: I plan on spoiling Katie Williams’s Absent throughout the review. There isn’t a good way to review this one without going into the details that make it work, so if you don’t want to have the book ruined for you, come back once you finish. In short, this is a brilliant woven story about ghosts, death, grief, the afterlife, our impressions of ourselves and other people, and high school. It’s tightly constructed, masterfully executed, and leaves almost as many questions for the reader to answer as it provides solutions.

Paige fell off the roof of her high school in a freak accident, and she died when her head hit the cement protective lip of the building. It wasn’t the fall that killed her, but rather, the knock on her head. Now that she’s a ghost and sentenced to an afterlife at her high school, she’s watching in as her former classmates deal with losing her. Paige isn’t alone, though — she’s there with Evan and Brooke. Evan died years ago, and Paige has no idea who he is and he isn’t quite forthcoming about it. Brooke, though. Brooke is someone Paige knows well — it was Paige’s secret boyfriend Lucas who was there when Brooke overdosed in the bathroom. He couldn’t save her.

Paige, Brooke, and Evan sit in on one of the grief counseling sessions (as ghosts, of course) and it’s here when popular girl Kelsey lets slip that she knew Paige didn’t fall off the roof. That she jumped. In no time flat, the rumor spreads throughout the school, infiltrating every social clique there is — from the popular kids, to the burn outs, to the jocks, and more. Paige knows she didn’t jump. Paige fell when she turned too quickly to see Lucas talking with her teacher (they’d been on the roof for the infamous physics class experiment of dropping an egg without it breaking). But now that this rumor has spread, Paige is questioning whether or not her death was truly an accident or whether or not her death was precisely what Kelsey said. Because who starts a rumor like that about a dead girl?

Katie Williams’s Absent is magical realism. Maybe even straight-up supernatural. What happens outside of Paige, Evan, and Brooke’s perspective is entirely in the real world. This is high school. There are cliques. There are classes. There are people spreading rumors about others. But what happens inside Paige, Evan, and Brooke’s world is entirely in their ghost world.

So when Paige discovers that being a ghost means she can press into and inhabit the bodies of the living? Can she change the course of a rumor? Can she get to the bottom of what really caused her death? And more importantly, can she figure out that the labels she’s attached to people — burn out, jock, loser, popular girl — are merely labels and the people are actually much more dynamic and whole than she imagined?

Whenever someone thinks of Paige, she realizes she’s able to press into them. And it’s her former best friend Usha she pressed into first. She’s easy since she thinks about Paige a lot, and Paige is fascinated to know why it is Usha suddenly started hanging out with the weird religious kids. The ones who they’d always made fun of because they’d always come across so fake. What Paige discovers is that, while she’s inhabiting Usha, she can make her say anything. She IS Usha entirely. And all she needs to do to escape from that body is walk to the end of the school property line; that’s when Usha returns to being Usha and Paige is sent back to the roof to relive her death again.

It’s brilliant. The ghost can inhabit the bodies of people who are alive. Paige is marveled by this and knows now she needs to continue doing this. It gives her entertainment, no matter how sick it is.

And what better entertainment than to inhabit the body of mean, popular girl Kelsey and force her to experience life as a less-than-perfect girl? The trick is that Paige has to figure out how to get Kelsey to think about her, and she knows just how to do it — she needs to get Usha to paint the memorial mural at the high school for her and Brooke. That way, whenever anyone walks by, they think of her. It’s the ideal set up.

This is a lot of explanation of plot, isn’t it? But I’d like to note this book clocks in at 188 pages. And it’s not at all plot-driven. It’s character-driven. As Paige discovers this ghost talent, she finds herself learning that the people she went to school with — the people she was so quick to label and judge and throw into boxes — are actually a lot more complex than she’d ever given them credit for while alive. Readers work alongside Paige through these discoveries, and they become more and more important as she works toward figuring out the truth to her death.

One thing Paige starts discovering, though, is that some of the people she’s interacting with, with whom she’d interacted with regularly in her actual life, aren’t acting entirely right. Lucas, who had been her secret boyfriend (and yes, secret — he was a jock and for her, being seen with him was the ultimate bad thing because he was a jock), starts acting erratic. He floods one of the school bathrooms. He makes out with a freshman girl on the floor in the bathroom, right where Brooke had died. Paige also realizes that Wes, who had always been a creepy druggie in her mind, is actually a sweetheart. That he actually had real, authentic, non-shy romantic feelings for her. As a ghost, Paige is torn about this. Her images of people are shattering left and right, and she can’t do anything about it.

Except, this is where Williams’s book becomes not just good, but excellent.

The truth of the matter is that Paige isn’t the only dead person who can inhabit bodies. Turns out that Evan and Brooke can, too. When Paige mentions what she’s been doing to Evan, he becomes frantic. He realizes that Brooke has been using this talent to manipulate people in the same way that Paige had been manipulating people. Worse, though. Brooke’s out for revenge. Perhaps Paige didn’t fall. Perhaps Paige didn’t jump.

Maybe, just maybe, she was manipulated by Brooke.

Where Paige had finally come to discover not everyone is as they seem, she’s also come to the moment where she realizes that there are secrets between and among people, too. That death isn’t always the final answer. In other words, Paige had taken ghost Brooke at face value. Brooke had been messed up with drugs when she died, and it was Lucas who tried to save her. But it’s possible that Brooke’s afterlife involved a lot of jealousy of Paige and Lucas’s relationship. So rather than work through it, rather than forgive what happened, rather than get to the bottom of it, Brooke sought revenge on Paige.

Absent draws upon stereotypes, drags them out, reexamines them, then pushes them back into another shape. These are incredibly complex characters working through grief and loss. Paige, for all she tells us and shows us in the narrative, isn’t a princess or a great girl. She’s not entirely likable. What she’s doing as a ghost in pressing into other people — in what she did to change the course of other people’s futures and memories of her — is terrible. It’s awful. She’s seeking out unnecessary vengeance as a ghost just because she can. There’s an incredible line in the book that sort of sums this up, and it sort of sums up what Paige realizes about who she was in the real world (even if she’s not entirely acknowledging her role in doing this in the afterlife, too): “They walk on, oblivious. People want to believe bad things, I tell myself, glaring around at my classroom. They want to believe the most shocking story. They see you as the worst version of yourself.” And then pages later, there’s Paige having this moment: “This is it. Exactly what I’d engineered, exactly what I’d said I’d wanted. How is vindication supposed to feel? It should feel like the parts snap into place. It should feel like eating a bowl of warm, thick soup on a cold day. It should feel like suddenly you’re solid again.”

And that’s why when the moment comes and Paige learns her death was the result of Brooke seeking vindication, the story snaps into one whole and solid place. Because, despite what Brooke thought the revenge would feel like, it wasn’t. It didn’t change anything of what happened in her waking life. It didn’t change anything except take away the life of another person. Lucas was still who he was. Wes was still who he was. Now, there was just a Paige-shaped hole in the school. And Paige learns that wasting all that time seeking revenge as a ghost wouldn’t change the course of events that led her here, either. Death doesn’t make sense. It shouldn’t. That’s why it’s so painful and why grief takes as many forms as it does. For people like Kelsey, it’s through rumor-spreading she deals. For people like Wes, it’s reliving the drawings he made.

For Paige, for Brooke, and for Evan? It’s accepting. It’s forgiving. It’s moving on and up.

Williams writes tightly, weaving all of these threads together seamlessly. Moreover, though, she incorporates very small details that add up to something much greater. The mural on the wall — the one Paige manipulated her best friend to paint — ends up playing a significant role in the story and in the resolution. But that mural is not what we as readers or Paige as a character ever suspect it is. It’s much greater. It’s about freedom and release and acceptance. It’s about moving up, rather than being stuck.

I haven’t talked a lot about why these three characters are stuck here, but it’s important. The three of them were suicide victims. There’s a small line early on about how being stuck in high school for eternity was like purgatory. The characters are forced to relive high school every single day. They’re forced to remember their stereotypes, their boxes, their moments of winning and their moments of losing. They’re forced to accept they can and will eventually be forgotten.

Because that’s Evan’s story.

Absent could be described, I think, as Lauren Oliver’s Before I Fall meets Nova Ren Suma’s Imaginary Girls. Readers who dug either or both will like this. In some ways, Williams’s book reminded me a lot, too, of the Korean horror film Whispering Corridors — there are many similar elements about social status and death, though, as well as revenge. I think fans of J-horror would dig this because of the ghosts seeking revenge (and the brilliant prose in this book — there is a moment when a character off-handedly asks if there are ghosts in Japan and if they were the nice or not nice kind, which anyone who has ever seen J-horror knows the answer to). How scary is it to think about your body being inhabited by a ghost? How scary is it to think that something outside ourselves could be determining the course of our future?

This book, of course, is about how we are entirely in control of determining our future. But oh, how it gets there is so savvy, so slick, and so twisted. Absent takes what Williams did so well with building a mystery and a set of questionable characters in The Space Between Trees and imbues it with the sort of ghost story I love so much. Even though this is a short novel, it is not fast-paced nor should it be read that way. Take your time with this one because there is a lot to absorb.

Absent is available now from Chronicle Books. Review copy received from the publisher. 

Filed Under: Reviews, Uncategorized, Young Adult

When You Were Here by Daisy Whitney

May 31, 2013 |

You may remember I talked about this book a long time ago over at Word for Teens. I wrote about how sometimes, there are romantic male leads in novels that just work so, so well. Danny, in Daisy Whitney’s When You Were Here, is one I talked about specifically. He’s stayed with me in the months since I finished this book, and I have a feeling he’ll remain on my list of favorite male characters in YA for a long time. 

Danny’s mom, who has toughed out five years of cancer, wants to make it just long enough to see him graduate valedictorian from high school. But before that date comes, his mom dies. Devastated by the loss, as well as the loss of his father a few years before and the loss of his adopted sister who chose to move to China to rediscover her roots, Danny is angry, broken, and confused about what the future could possibly hold. And there’s also another complication, too: Holland. She’s the girl he’d been in love with forever and the girl who was in every way perfect for him. But their relationship ended much too soon and without any resolution. Danny was left in the dark when she suddenly disappeared from his life. 

Faced with big decisions about where to go from here, Danny chooses to figure out what it is that kept his mom going for so long. Why she continued to be hopeful and happy, even though her life was near the end. To do this, Danny decides he’s going to fly to the apartment they owned in Tokyo, meet the doctor who meant so much to his mother. This is also his chance to really think about what he wants out of his life. 

Along the way, Danny meets Kana, who helped take care of the apartment before his mom died. She’s quirky, she’s energetic, and she’s invested in making sure Danny makes the most of his time in Tokyo. It’s not at all romantic — which is a huge plus in my book — but rather, it’s Danny’s opportunity to rediscover the value and importance of friendship. 

Maybe most important was the twist in the story. That’s Holland’s story. If you don’t want to be spoiled, skip down to the next paragraph. The reason Holland disappeared from Danny’s life was that she got pregnant. Since Danny had been the only boy she’d been with and their relationship hadn’t been going on that long and she had been on the pill, it was a reality she hadn’t quite wrapped her head around. What made it worse was when she went into early labor and when baby Sarah died. Danny is the only person not in the loop on this, and he learns about his daughter when going through his mom’s things in Tokyo. His mom had known about the baby, but she and Holland both chose not to tell Danny. It wasn’t a choice out of cruelty. It was done to protect him because he had already lost so much in his life. And the truth of it was that the entire situation was scary and heartbreaking for everyone involved. 

When Danny does get to meet the doctor his mother had invested so much in, not only does he understand the value and purpose of his mom’s life, but he has a moment and realizes what value his own is worth.

Whitney handles all of the topics in this book delicately and powerfully in equal measure. Danny’s voice is knock out, authentic, and it is pained. Danny is a boy of action — his feelings play out in the way he acts and the words he chooses to use. They’re not always kind and he’s not always rational. But these things happen the way they do because it’s how Danny works through his pain and his grief. It’s the way he begins to make sense of the world. This is why he chooses to get on that plane and go to Tokyo. It’s why he doesn’t simply DWELL in the anguish but rather, he works and walks through it, step by tortured step. Where the twist element came in, another author could have pushed the envelope too much, adding simply one more thing to the list of horrible things going on in a character’s life. But Whitney introduces and weaves this in so carefully and thoughtfully that it instead amplifies the core of who Danny, his mother, and Holland really are as people. 

Danny’s understanding of his mother’s fight — and his mother’s desire to quit the fight — comes to a head when he meets with the doctor to whom she claimed saved her and to whom she dedicated so much energy and belief. And boy, did I cry. Danny learns that choosing the time one lives and the time one dies was the central force of his mother’s hope, even in her battle with cancer. It’s philosophical without being pandering, and it’s spiritual without being spiritual (if that even makes sense). Whitney excels are imbuing the narrative with the Eastern and Western philosophy not only in how she structures the story and Danny’s journey, but even in the way that death and life are explored.

The writing in When You Were Here is sharp, searing, and noteworthy. It doesn’t take a back seat to the complexities of the story nor the complexities of the characters. I give huge credit, too, for how well-done the sex scenes in this book are. There is a great contrast in the sort of sexual relationship Danny has with Trina — it’s one where she is in control, where she calls the shots, and where she gets what she wants and he takes it because he feels so empty and broken from all of the loss in his life. It’s not Holland, and it’s not an emotional and deeply satisfying act of intimacy. When Danny and Holland reconnect in Tokyo, after laying bare all of the things that were keeping them at a distance, their intimacy is raw, powerful, and healthy. Danny is in it not just physically, but emotionally and mentally. And maybe what made it so good in that moment was that almost nothing is said at all about the mechanics. Because that didn’t matter.

I’ve read a lot of grief books, but without doubt, this one stands out. It’s so good it hurts to think about. My one qualm, and it’s something I didn’t spend a lot of time thinking about, is that Danny does come from privilege. He’s able to head to Tokyo to a private and paid-for condo without issue. He has a home back in California that’s taken care of, too. These all make sense contextually, but they do require the reader to suspend belief a little. But the freedom Danny has — he’s done with high school and in that “what do I do now?” stage of life before making decisions about going to college or traveling — is completely believable, especially with all he’s been thrown in the recent months and years. 

Whitney gets bonus points for a great sidekick animal with Danny’s dog Sandy Koufax, and for those of you worried, the dog does not die. Pass When You Were Here off to readers who like foreign-set contemporary stories, who enjoy grief books, who enjoy romantic male lead characters, and those who want to fall into a story for a long time. This one’s been compared to Gayle Forman’s Where She Went, and while I don’t buy that comparison (besides both feature a male romantic lead), I do see how fans of Forman’s writing would dig Whitney’s novel. 

Review copy received from the publisher. When You Were Here will be available Tuesday. 

Filed Under: Reviews, Uncategorized, Young Adult

The Girl Who Was Supposed to Die by April Henry

May 29, 2013 |

I wasn’t hugely impressed by April Henry’s The Night She Disappeared, though I could see its appeal for other readers. The Girl Who Was Supposed to Die is a bit of a step up for me – it’s a little more suspenseful, a little more of a genuine mystery, and feels a little more substantial.

Our initially-unnamed protagonist wakes up in an isolated cabin with no memory of who or where she is. (Yes, it’s one of those stories.) What she does know is that there are two men who are deciding whether they should kill her. She’s tied to a chair. Her hands are in pain and she realizes her fingernails have been pulled out.

The argument between the two men ends: she is to die. The girl is dragged outside the cabin by one of them, but due to some quick thinking and sheer luck, she’s able to knock him out and get away. She runs. She doesn’t know where to go; she doesn’t even know her own name.  

As in The Night She Disappeared, there’s a skater boy who believes her wild story and decides to help her out. The two hunt down clues even as the murderers hunt them down, and it makes for quite a suspenseful ride.

The amnesia is a cheat, though. There’s no real mystery beyond what is locked in the girl’s mind, and when her memories all come rushing back at the end – as you knew they would – all is revealed. It’s not my favorite kind of mystery. It feels cheap, like all of the hunting for clues I did as a reader alongside the protagonist during the bulk of the book was pointless.

Still, it’s a fun, fast-paced read, and the amnesia aspect didn’t ruin it for me. When the memories do come back, at least they’re mildly surprising and overall fairly interesting. I appreciated that the details of the story weren’t pedestrian as I found those in the The Night She Disappeared to be. Here, we get conspiracies and biological warfare alongside your usual murder and kidnapping.

April Henry’s books remind me of 21st-century versions of Joan Lowery Nixon’s mysteries, which I loved as an early teen. Both authors’ books tended to feature girls caught in bad (usually violent) situations who rely on their own quick thinking in order to unravel the mystery. There’s usually some double-crossing and a few red herrings, but the stories are never long and they’re always suspenseful and quick reads.

Review copy received from the publisher. The Girl Who Was Supposed to Die will be published June 11.

Filed Under: Mystery, Reviews, Uncategorized, Young Adult

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