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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
      • Graphic Novels
      • Non-Fiction
      • Picture Books
      • YA Fiction
    • So You Want to Read YA Series
  • Review Policy

High and Dry by Sarah Skilton

July 1, 2014 |

Sarah Skilton’s sophomore novel High and Dry, a follow-up to her acclaimed debut Bruised, takes her writing in a new direction. It’s a noir-ish mystery set in high school; I’ve discovered that people will give me confused looks when I state this. Apparently the words “noir” and “high school” don’t tend to go together in most people’s minds. Skilton makes it work, though – for the most part.

Charlie Dixon is a senior in high school, a star (of sorts) of his school’s soccer team, and hopelessly in love with Ellie Chen, who dumped him last week. When the book starts off, we find Charlie feeling very depressed, drinking his sadness away. He’s determined to get Ellie back, though she rebuffs him and won’t tell him exactly why she decided they shouldn’t see each other anymore.

Charlie decides to go to a party where he knows Ellie will be. He gets drunk while there, and after being rejected again, his other ex-girlfriend Bridget gives him a ride home. The next day, Charlie is shocked to learn that a girl from his school is critically ill. She got sick while at the party, and someone driving Charlie’s car is the one who dropped her off at the hospital – and then left the scene. It appears Charlie is being framed.

Bridget complicates the situation. She says she left a flash drive in one of the computers at the school library and needs Charlie to help find out who took it, since Charlie sometimes works there. If he doesn’t help her, she’ll reveal incriminating texts that she set up the night she drove him home while he was passed out. She claims the flash drive has a scholarship essay on it, but Charlie knows there’s more to the story.

This book is probably a horror novel for parents who don’t realize all the nasty and unsafe stuff their teenagers get up to. It opens with Charlie drinking heavily. There’s a big subplot about drug manufacture, use, and sale by teens. There’s a cheating scandal and lots of bullying, with some violence. Charlie also gets involved in a soccer match-throwing scheme. There’s a lot of dirty stuff going on, which contributes to the noir-ish feel of the story. Charlie’s voice, which is the standout of the story, carries the reader through it. He’s depressed and hopeful at the same time. He thinks little things are huge deals and reduces important stuff to trivia. He walks a fine line between being likeable and unlikeable, often falling on the wrong side of that line. He’s smart about handling the mystery but stupid about handling his relationships with his ex-girlfriends and his friends. His voice is pure teen. It makes him an interesting character, even if as a reader I couldn’t root for him to succeed in all his endeavors. This is a fairly short book, but Skilton has created a fully-formed, unique character in Charlie.

As a mystery, the novel is very, very good. It’s one of the more complex and interesting mysteries aimed at teens I’ve read in years. Skilton juggles multiple moving parts successfully, transforming what seems at first to be a simple Encyclopedia Brown-style mystery about a stolen flash drive into an absorbing, multi-faceted mystery that touches on teen alcohol and drug use, mandated standardized testing, fixing soccer matches, friendship, bullying, and even a few problems of teachers and parents. Ultimately, there’s not just one thing Charlie needs to figure out – there are several, including what his former best friend is hiding. Skilton skillfully places clues throughout the novel, giving us multiple suspects and a fair few twists and turns. The ultimate payoff is quite satisfying. 

As a snapshot of high school life, I think it’s less successful. As a way of avoiding the rampant bullying that plagued the high school, all students willingly choose a formal group to be a part of, and their fellow group-mates then protect each other. I don’t mean they align themselves with the so-called jocks or nerds; I mean they join an extracurricular sport or club and call themselves a slang term that describes it. The soccer players are the beckhams, for example. There are rules associated with this set-up, too: upperclassmen can’t even talk to lowerclassmen without a formal introduction by another upperclassman who knows them both.

I think Skilton is probably making a comment on how we pigeonhole ourselves and others (in high school and beyond), but she didn’t sell it well enough for me to buy it. I guess I just found it very difficult to believe that everyone would willingly join something extracurricular. A lot of kids I went to high school with just wanted to go home at the end of the day. It seems like casual gangs would have been more realistic. This is a relatively unimportant thing for most of the story, but a big part of the plot hinges on this aspect of social organization near the end. My inability to suspend my disbelief in this regard lessens the impact of an otherwise very successful story.

Hand this one to your readers who like their mysteries a little hard-boiled. While not nearly as horrifying as Barry Lyga’s I Hunt Killers, it’s a bit more intense than Todd Strasser’s thrillogy (beginning with Wish You Were Dead), despite the fact that there’s no real murder here. It’s the lifestyle of the teens and Charlie’s voice that gives it that edge.

Review copy received from the publisher at TLA. High and Dry is available now.

Filed Under: Mystery, Reviews, Uncategorized, Young Adult

What I’m Reading Now

June 30, 2014 |

With the long weekend and (a few hours in the car) ahead of me, I’m really excited about the extra reading time I’ll get to sneak in in the near future. I’ve been talking about how my reading this year has been slower than normal, but fortunately, it’s been getting better in the last couple of weeks. I’ve been able to get through two or three books a week, which is about my average. I’m finding that working with the slump, rather than trying to not acknowledge and respect it, has been really helpful. Perhaps that’s a future post in the making.

That said, here’s a peek at what I’ve got on my short list and what I’ve got bookmarks in right now.

The Girl From The Well by Rin Chupeco (August 5 from Sourcebooks)

This book! It’s been in my hands since it came as a bound manuscript last fall, and I’m finally sinking into it. It’s been called The Grudge meets Dexter in one description and The Ring meets The Exorcist in another. I think those are all pretty fair comparisons, and I’d say this is the kind of book fans of j-horror will eat up. There is a ghost spirit who is seeking revenge and we all know this isn’t going to end well for . . . well probably not for anyone. I’m only a bit into it at the time of this writing, but I am so looking forward to racing through, since the pacing is quick, the writing atmospheric and haunting, and the story absorbing. It hits all my sweet spots for good horror.

Shotgun Lovesongs by Nickolas Butler

Butler’s novel has been recommended to me by multiple people, and since I’ve been on a really positive adult novel reading spree through this slump, I’m eager to pick this one up and dive in. It’s about four long-time friends who grew up in the same small Wisconsin town and explores how their lives have changed and shifted and how that plays out in their relationships.

Anatomy of a Boyfriend and Anatomy of a Single Girl by Daria Snadowsky

I haven’t read either of these books, but since I’ve been keeping an eye out for books tackling teen sexuality in some capacity, I know I want to read both of these. Boyfriend is a few years old, but Single Girl came out last year and when it came out, I put them both into my pile of titles to get to, and now they’re up. I’m eager for what should be some solid contemporary.

As a side note to this, if you know of any really solid contemporary realistic YA that explores female sexuality that maybe isn’t an obvious choice, I’d love to hear about it. I’m especially curious about books out in the last year or two — the usual suspects are ones I’ve read. But what may I have missed?

The Gospel of Winter by Brendan Kiely

I didn’t know if this was a book I wanted to read for a long time, especially because it does that thing that I find myself turned off by, which is being set in the late 90s/early 00s. But I’ve read so many great reviews of this and how it explores sexual assault and the way adults can take advantage of teenagers, so I’m going to give it a go.

The cover of Kiely’s book is really neat, too. It looks like a standard boy-in-the-shadow cover, but the silhouette is imprinted on the hardcover itself, and the designed white part with the title and author are the jacket — it might not be vellum proper, but that’s what the effect is like.

Kiss of Broken Glass by Madeleine Kuderick (September 9)

A verse novel about a 15-year-old girl who is mentally ill and put under a psychiatric watch for a short period of time. Sold.

Blind by Rachel DeWoskin (August 7)

It starts on the 4th of July when a wayward firework flies into Emma’s eyes, causing her to go blind. This is about what happens as she works through her life in a new way and how she navigates life in her new normal. DeWoskin wrote Big Girl Small, which was an Alex Award winner a few years back and has . . . also been sitting in a pile for me to get to reading since it also sounds like it’s up my alley. One thing I’m a little hesitant about with Blind is that it’s very long — over 400 pages. I’m not opposed to big books, but the last few I’ve read that have gotten that long would have been much stronger were they about 50-100 pages tighter. I’m hoping to be proven wrong this time.

What’s on your to-read for the week? What should be on my radar? And if you’ve read anything here, I’d love to know what you think.

Filed Under: Uncategorized, What's on my shelf

Graphic Novel Roundup

June 27, 2014 |

 

The Return of Zita the Spacegirl by Ben Hatke
We return to outer space for this final installment in Hatke’s trilogy about Zita and her adventures on alien planets. Zita has been captured by an evildoer masquerading as an arbiter of justice and put on trial for her “crimes” from the previous two novels. Old friends return to help her escape, of course, and further adventures ensue. Hatke excels at creating truly oddball characters (aliens and robots and strange humans, too), throwing them all together, and letting them develop authentic and fun relationships with each other. The art is lovely as always and the end of the story is poignant and encourages further imagination from the book’s young readers.

Finished copy provided by the publisher. The Return of Zita the Spacegirl is available now.

Andre the Giant: Life and Legend by Box Brown
Brown gives a nuanced portrait of the WWF wrestler and actor from The Princess Bride. I knew practically nothing about him going into this other than the fact that he wrestled and acted in the movie; I learned a lot while reading the book. Andre comes across as complex and not always likeable, but that’s as it should be. Brown has used multiple sources for this biography, all of which he lists in easy to read format at the end. I rarely read source notes, but these were almost as interesting as the biography itself – they reveal just how much of the book was based on others’ perceptions of Andre and how much of it was based on Andre’s own words and actions. Most of the book focuses on Andre’s wrestling and very little of it on The Princess Bride, so fans of the movie may be disappointed. Adult and older teen readers looking for an absorbing graphic biography should find plenty to like here, though.

Review copy provided by the publisher. Andre the Giant: Life and Legend is available now.

Cleopatra in Space #1: Target Practice by Mike Maihack
This book is exactly what it says: the most famous Cleopatra finds a tablet as a teenager and it sends her into space far, far in the future. She lands at a space school where she learns how to fight as well as more mundane things like algebra. She also learns she’s prophesied to defeat a great villain. This is a super fun, full-color graphic novel that smooshes together a lot of high appeal factors: ancient Egypt, space, time travel, a girl protagonist who can fight. It’s got a lot of terrific little details: the school is run by cats, a fun nod to the ancient Egyptian reverence of these animals, and Cleopatra’s future transportation apparatus is a bike that looks like the sphinx. While Cleopatra is 15 here, the book is best suited (and appropriate) for tween readers. I’ll definitely be on the lookout for subsequent volumes.

Review copy picked up at TLA. Cleopatra in Space #1: Target Practice is available now.

Hidden: A Child’s Story of the Holocaust by Loic Dauvillier
Dauvillier’s graphic novel about the Holocaust – a fictional account, not based on any one particular person – shows that it is possible to successfully address horrifying historical events with young children without traumatizing them. One night, a young child comes across her grandmother and notices she is feeling very sad. The grandmother opens up to her granddaughter and shares the story of her childhood in World War II Paris. As a child, Dounia experienced what it was like to first wear the Jewish star, then be separated from her parents and being hidden by various friends and neighbors as violence against Jewish people in France escalated. It’s told in a gentle way, with a focus on universal feelings that both Dounia in the 1940s and her granddaughter in the present day could share. The art is child-friendly and expertly conveys the emotions being expressed. A challenging venture, but well executed.

Finished copy provided by the publisher. Hidden: A Child’s Story of the Holocaust is available now.

Ariol #4: A Beautiful Cow by Emmanuel Guibert
The Ariol books are collections of slice-of-life vignettes that feature a large group of anthropomorphized animals representing kids about 8-10 years old. Ariol is a donkey who has a crush on a cow named Petula (the cow of the title), but not many of the stories actually involve Petula. Several of them are school stories. One involves a group of the kids/animals thinking they’ve come down with fleas – but is it just a ploy to get out of class? Another features Ariol and his friend visiting his grandparents; another is about school picture day. The vignettes (drawn with slightly cartoonish, but not exaggerated, illustrations) are relatable to kids with understated, authentic humor. I liked that the kids don’t always act very nicely – and that the not-so-nice behavior isn’t always followed up with a lecture from the parents on how to act nicer. Guibert shows kids as they are – you know, if they were animals and not people. There’s also some dry humor that adults will enjoy. A pleasant, low-key success.

Finished copy provided by the publisher. Ariol #4: A Beautiful Cow is available now.

Filed Under: Graphic Novels, Reviews, Uncategorized

2014 Printz and Morris Predictions at the Half-Way Point

June 26, 2014 |

Every year we like to take a stab at what we imagine could be contenders for the Michael L. Printz award half-way through the year and then again a couple of weeks before the award is announced. What’s been interesting this year is what a few of the blogs we like to follow for Printz-related predictions and discussions have been eerily . . . silent. People get busy, blogs fade away, but even in the general book world, it seems as though discussion of what could be a Printz contender this year is very, very quiet. So coming up with our guesses and reasons behind them will be interesting because we have very little to base those comments upon so far.

In addition to talking about Printz, we’ll talk a bit about the Morris award, too. It’s a great award and one that, unlike the Printz, can be a little looser in terms of what books might qualify since it does take reader appeal into consideration. It also takes into consideration the interest in seeing future works from the author, meaning that the books honored can be imperfect but show immense promise and talent.

Of course, we’d love if you weighed in, too. We’re sticking to books that have been published between January and July 1, since that’s all we’ve had time to read and discuss. We might throw in some books we think could be contenders in the second half of the year based solely on name and prior merit. So let us know what you think of our thoughts and what you’re thinking about at the half-way point in 2014.

Kelly’s Thoughts


The Printz

We haven’t seen a Printz title yet. Or at least, we haven’t seen a big book with Printz written on it yet. Sure, we’ve seen some books that have been strong and garnered a lot of buzz, but I don’t think any of them stands the test just yet. That doesn’t mean they’re bad or that they’re unworthy. It just means nothing has yet screamed this is the one.

That said, here’s a look at what I think will generate some solid discussion both within the committee and within the book community who is invested in talking about the Printz. I did spend a little time with Jen J’s starred review spreadsheet, which helped me think through some of the possibilities.

Without doubt, I think the two books generating the most discussion so far this year are Andrew Smith’s Grasshopper Jungle and E. Lockhart’s We Were Liars. And these discussions aren’t without good reason: both are inventive, and both rise above because they’re written by seasoned authors who’ve earned respect and proven they can both tell a good story and do so with strong, sharp writing.

That said, I think both novels aren’t strong enough. Smith’s novel sort of falls into the camp that Karyn talks about in her discussion of Midwinterblood last year: it’s definitely well-written and there’s a story here and that story makes sense but it’s also a really bizarre story that I wonder if people have found to be exciting because it’s weird and different even if they don’t necessarily get it. I found there to be some deeply problematic aspects of the story in and of itself, primarily that it’s got a lot of issues rendering a single female as a fully-fleshed, worthwhile being in the story (Shann becomes a baby-maker, even when Austin claims he loves her and the adult females in this story are all sad and medical drug-dependent). Is it a neat read? Sure. Is it a Printz? I think it falls apart and I think beyond the issues in story that will pop up, I think some of the construction itself might fail to hold.

E. Lockhart’s We Were Liars is a bit stronger than Smith’s novel, but I think it’s one that will fall apart on subsequent reads. Maybe it’s because I read and watch horror, but the plot itself was predictable to me from the onset. I knew what was going on, and because I knew, I spent the read collecting evidence for my hunch. To me, that read as the story’s strings being too clear in the writing, and while the style itself is different, it feels overly constructed. The craft was very transparent to me, even when I wasn’t looking at it, and I think when the committee sits down to reread, those things will pop out more.

Not relating to the Printz necessarily, but worth mentioning: the marketing on this book continues to drive me nuts because the twist isn’t revolutionary. By playing up the idea the twist is that way, I think that the enjoyment of the book is tied up in whether or not the twist was successfully sprung upon the reader.

After the Smith and Lockhart books, I had to dig into Jen’s spreadsheet to see what books have earned a number of stars. There’s Laurie Halse Anderson’s The Impossible Knife of Memory, but as I mentioned in my review earlier this year, this book suffers a pacing problem in the final act of the book. It certainly deserved the stars it earned, but from the purely literary standpoint from which the Printz discussion comes, it’s not going to pass the test.

So then, Jenny Hubbard’s And We Stay and Susan Kuklin’s Beyond Magenta emerged in the starred reviews as contenders. I read Hubbard’s book and thought it was pretty good. She earned a Morris honor for her debut novel Paper Covers Rock, and without doubt, her book is tightly written and constructed. My personal issues with the book, which rested on the time setting not being clear or necessary (and later clarified to me as being done to avoid social networking complications), may or may not matter to the committee, and I am willing to bet it won’t matter much. This is maybe the strongest title so far this year from the writing and story aspect, and I think it’s one that will be talked about as rising to the top of the YA literary pile this year.

I’ve not read Kuklin’s non-fiction work, but I’ve read a handful of reviews of the title. Between the positive reception in those, as well as the reception it earned in the trade reviews, I think it’s also a strong contender. I want to get my hands on a copy because it wasn’t one I had had in mind to pick up before, but seeing it’s earned so many stars (and so little discussion from what I’ve seen), it looks like a solid possibility.

My last two predictions at this point are Stephanie Kuehn’s Complicit and Nina LaCour’s Everything Leads to You. Both were Morris winners and finalists respectively for their debut novels, and both titles earned starred reviews — Kuehn’s novel is at three as of this writing, but the possibility for it to earn more exists since it just came out. LaCour’s has earned just one, but Printz books aren’t necessarily ones that have garnered a slew of stars (nor even reviews, as White Bicycle proved). I reviewed Complicit last week and where I had issues with how the twist didn’t work in Lockhart’s book, the twist in Kuehn’s was smartly executed and I think that it’ll hold up on subsequent rereads.

As for the LaCour novel, I think the tight writing and compelling story will give this some discussion time, but I do wonder if the fact it’s a romance (or love story?) will hurt its chances a bit. Not that the committee wouldn’t discuss it fairly, but I wonder if the fact it’s less traditionally literary will keep it from reaching the kinds of discussion I think it should. Then again, last year, Eleanor & Park earned an honor, which I’m still surprised/not surprised about.

A couple of other books at this point I think are contenders by virtue of starred reviews include Jillian and Mariko Tamaki’s This One Summer — so far the title with the most starred reviews and the last collaboration the team did, Skim, was certainly a title many thought had Printz potential.

I haven’t yet read Kwame Alexander’s The Crossover, but it’s gathered a handful of starred reviews and while it skews on the younger end of YA, it’s eligible. I’ve also got a feeling that John Corey Whaley’s Noggin will be talked about but I can’t say more because I haven’t read it and haven’t seen a whole lot of talk about it in the blogs I’m reading. I think that’s because it’s still relatively new, not because it’s not a solid read.

And I bet that She is Not Invisible, another Marcus Sedgwick title, will be in the ring as a possibility.

As far as possibilities for titles publishing in the second half of the year, I’ve got Andrew Smith’s second novel this year, 100 Sideways Miles, on my radar (it’s already earned 3 starred reviews), Jandy Nelson’s I’ll Give You The Sun, and A. S. King’s Glory O’Brien and the History of the Future in my mind. All of them have been talked about as solid contenders in the past, and I think that means they’ll earn that sort of attention again. All of those books are ones I definitely plan on keeping an eye on to see where they may fall.

But at this point, I think the most honest assessment of Printz-worthy books is this: there are very few so far. It’s been a less amazing year for YA fiction, and I think we might see some real surprises. I’m keeping my eye to smaller presses at this point to see what’s standing out because I bet we see some White Bicycles not only in the final slate of titles come January, but I have a feeling as discussion among people who love doing mock events and discussing possibilities grows, there will be a lot of surprise possibilities.

That’s what makes this fun, though.

The Morris


I haven’t read as many books this year as I would have liked to, and I definitely have read fewer debut novels than I hoped. I still have half a year to get it together, so I’m kind of thinking in terms of what books have gotten great reviews and might be contenders to build the rest of the year’s to-read list.

In fact, of the titles below, I’ve only read two. I have the Kiely and Cardi titles on my pile to get to sooner. Both earned some stars, and both sound like the kinds of books that would “fit” what the Morris committee looks for. The two titles I have read, Pointe and Far From You, were, without question, two of the strongest novels I’ve read so far this year in terms of writing, construction, and appeal, and I think both books left me really eager to see what Colbert and Sharpe will put out there next. Both were risky in terms of approach — Colbert’s because it tackled so much and did so in a way that was layered, allowing readers to delve into the complexity of Theo’s life and Sharpe’s because of how she wove two timelines together and offered up a main character in Sophie who wasn’t reliable, thus forcing the reader to wonder what of her words were worth believing and which were not worth investing in.

For Cruel Beauty, I think the fact Kimberly loved it, as did a handful of other readers I trust, it’s one worth keeping an eye on for Morris.

At this point, I’m still playing catchup on debuts from the first half of the year and haven’t kept an ear to what’s coming as well as I wish I had. But if I were to make a prediction, I suspect Robin Talley’s Lies We Tell Ourselves is going to have some serious Morris discussion if it’s written even half as well as the premise sounds.





Kimberly’s Thoughts

For my predictions this year, I’m going to throw out three titles that I’ve read, plus speculate on a few that I’ve heard chatter about here and there. As before, I’ll stick to SFF titles, since that’s what interests me when it comes to discussions about award-winners. 


The Printz

All of my Printz picks so far are dark horses. The Printz has been pretty kind to SFF titles the past few years (four out of the five past winners could arguably be called SFF in some way, and last year two of the honors were SFF as well), but I can’t say I’ve read any that scream Printz to me – at least not yet. I think it’s important to distinguish between titles that I loved and titles that are Printz-worthy, since those are two very different things. I’ve read a few books that I loved; I don’t think I’ve read any that will get a Printz nod. Still, here are a few that have a slim shot, maybe.

In the Shadows by Kiersten White and Jim Di Bartolo received very mixed reviews from review journals. Publishers Weekly says Di Bartolo’s illustrations “suffer from a lack of pacing” and White’s text is often “overshadowed by the instant impact of the pictures.” Kirkus gives it a pretty critical review: “Ambitious but a failure both as a whole and in its parts.” Booklist, on the other hand, gave it a starred review, calling it intriguing, enigmatic, enthralling: “The well-written words harmonize perfectly with the lushly executed, haunting images.” I loved it, and I’m putting it up here because when the Printz goes SFF, it tends to go with the stuff that’s weird or experimental (see: Going Bovine, Midwinterblood), and this is both. I think it’s a deliberately challenging read that accomplishes more with its graphic/prose hybrid style than it could have otherwise.

The Winner’s Curse by Marie Rutkoski may be even more of a long shot. As a society, we still tend to regard romances as lesser than other kinds of stories, and this is primarily a romance. But Rutkoski uses the romance to address huge, important themes (in addition to how and why we love one another, which is huge and important in itself): slavery, how we treat those we consider “other,” conflicting loyalties, family, love of home. It’s also got fantastic world-building (Rutkoski does this so well she makes it seem easy), great pacing, and smooth, lovely writing. Writing this blurb is making me want to re-read it, it’s that good.

Karen Healey’s While We Run rounds out my short list of contenders. I’m writing about it as a Printz possibility because it does what science fiction does best: reveal truths about ourselves and our world by writing about people and places that couldn’t exist here and now. Healey’s future is believable; it’s a better place and a worse place than the world we live in now. Her characters are multifaceted and easily relatable to today’s teens. Her exploration of a protagonist who has undergone severe trauma in a genre often characterized as “fluff” is incisive and admirable. I’m not sure how much the fact that it’s a sequel would impact the judging, but it’s better than the first volume and a terrific accomplishment in its own right.

A few other SFF titles that I’ve seen discussed a great deal as Printz possibilities include Grasshopper Jungle by Andrew Smith, Noggin by John Corey Whaley, and She is Not Invisible by Marcus Sedgwick. Both Whaley and Sedgwick have won previously, which makes their next books automatic contenders (they’ll be discussed, at least). All three seem pretty weird (and that’s saying something from an SFF fan). I’m not sure I’ll read any of them, but they’re worth knowing about.

Morris

I love the Morris because, as Kelly mentioned, appeal is a factor, and imperfect books – those that are exciting and lovely but flawed – can still win. I always feel like more traditional fantasy and SF have a better chance at the Morris than the Printz. They’re also the ones I’m more excited to read when the winners and honorees are announced. Below are three I’ve read this year that I think may have a shot.

Cruel Beauty by Rosamund Hodge is the one I’m really hoping will get some recognition. It’s hugely creative, beautifully written, and takes risks in its storytelling. The central love story is a bit darker than what you normally see, and although this is in large part a re-telling of Beauty and the Beast, that darkness is present in the Beauty as well as the Beast. It also weaves in elements of Greek mythology and other fairy tales while managing to keep the story unique. Its ambition is huge and I’m excited to see what Hodge does next.

Salvage by Alexandra Duncan is a sci fi feminist coming of age tale that masterfully takes the protagonist from sheltered naivete to wiser maturity. In a market crowded with action-heavy SF, Salvage stands out as being more introspective, perhaps a bit slower, but it’s never boring. Duncan’s ambition is vast here, too – she’s created a number of different cultures complete with different slang and speech patterns. Her depiction of Ava as a girl overwhelmed in a world that doesn’t understand her should resonate strongly with teens.

I just started Otherbound by Corinne Duyvis the other day, so I’m not very far into it, but I’m impressed by its originality. It features a teenage boy from our own world who sees through a girl from another world’s eyes whenever his own are closed. Even when he blinks. This has led to a diagnosis of epilepsy. He’s also disabled, having lost his foot in an accident as a young child. The girl whose body he inhabits is mute, her tongue having been cut out as unnecessary for her role as a servant. The concept is imaginative and the way it’s written is clear and interesting. It’s gotten starred reviews from Publishers Weekly and Kirkus.

Filed Under: book awards, Uncategorized

The Kiss of Deception by Mary E. Pearson

June 25, 2014 |

Pearson’s latest, a high fantasy kick-off to a series set in a pseudo-medieval world, is a big departure from her previous novels. She’s mostly known for the futuristic SF Jenna Fox Chronicles and a number of standalone realistic contemporaries. The Kiss of Deception proves her ability to write beautifully in any of these genres, and I wouldn’t be surprised if this series – called the Remnant Chronicles – surpasses her previous titles in popularity and acclaim.

Lia is a princess, the first daughter born to the king and queen of her country, which means she should have the sight (the ability to see or predict future events). She doesn’t. Her parents are sure it will appear, so they arrange a marriage between her and the prince of a neighboring country, based in part on her nonexistent ability. The two countries’ relations are tense, and this marriage would go a long way toward smoothing things over. But Lia knows her parents are manufacturing a deception, and she’s sure it will end in disaster, not to mention the fact she’s never met this man she’s supposed to marry. So she flees, along with her maid and friend Pauline.

They travel to a distant town, where Pauline has a relative who will set them up with jobs at her inn. Lia and Pauline are no longer princess and maid; they’re two common girls working honest jobs. Unbeknownst to Lia, the two young men who show up in the same town soon afterward are not who they appear either – one is the prince whom Lia jilted, and the other is an assassin sent to kill her. Lia must navigate her new life as well as the attentions of these two young men/boys – attentions which may appear friendly or romantic, but are potentially anything but. As a reader, I was right there alongside Lia, knowing just a touch more than her, but having to figure out most of it as she does.

It sounds a bit generic, and that’s a fair claim to make, actually. The basic plot is one you’ve likely read before, if you read much high fantasy at all (princess runs away from home to escape arranged marriage, encounters adventure). But the way the book is crafted – how the story unfolds – is what makes it special. Pearson juggles multiple narrators (Lia, the prince, and the assassin), all of them unreliable to some degree, revealing just enough at certain points to keep us reading further. When readers finally learn a big truth late in the story, it will send them flipping the pages back to spot the clues Pearson dropped for them – and they’re all there.

Writing a book with a “twist” (though I hesitate to call it that here, since it implies trickery) can be tough. Some readers love the feeling of surprise, while others may feel deliberately misled or lied to – manipulated, in other words. I suppose all fiction writing can be called manipulation, but it didn’t feel like that in Kiss of Deception. Rather, I felt that Pearson was challenging my assumptions, both as a reader and simply as a person who regularly interacts with other humans. Specifically, she’s telling her readers not to make assumptions about the people we come across – for good or ill. I also think it equally likely that many readers will not be fooled by the red herrings along the way and will easily see the truth from the outset, which is part of what makes the crafting of the story so good. These readers may even be surprised to learn that others were fooled into thinking something entirely different.

The Kiss of Deception is great not only because of this particular plot point. For much of the story, the pace is slow, leisurely, but it’s far from boring. It’s a bit of a world-building lovers’ dream: we see Lia settling into her life at the inn, learning her job and how to interact with people on their own level rather than as a royal. It’s a cultural shock of sorts, but Lia’s up to it. Sometimes she falters; sometimes she triumphs. She grows and comes into her own as a young woman. It’s interesting and quite literally builds character (just not in the way your mom tells you scrubbing the toilet will). By the time the plot really gets rolling a bit later on, I felt like I knew Lia well and saw things clearly through her eyes.

There’s romance here, and it’s lovely, but this is also a story about friendship. While Lia is clearly the protagonist, Pauline gets quite a lot of page time. She’s the best friend, yes, but she’s also a person in her own right, with her own dreams and disappointments. As her former maid, Pauline’s relationship with Lia could have suffered mightily once they started relating to each other in a different capacity. Instead, their friendship deepens. They continue to trust one another, comfort one another, and help each other past the rocky times, even if they do sometimes disagree. I was so glad Pearson didn’t manufacture jealousy and spite to end their friendship, as I’ve seen done in other similar stories before.

I read a lot of YA that feels a bit unfinished or just not as good as it could have been. Maybe the novel is the author’s debut, or the editing is a bit poor, or ideas are hazy or the writing a bit sloppy. That’s not the case here. It’s a beautifully crafted, sophisticated novel with fully-fleshed characters and an original way of telling the story. It’s perfect for any high fantasy fan, but especially good for those who loved Graceling and other fantasy novels that tackle the idea that your life should be your own to make, not anyone else’s.

Review copy provided by the publisher. The Kiss of Deception will be available July 8.

Filed Under: Fantasy, Reviews, Uncategorized, Young Adult

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