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Where the Stars Still Shine by Trish Doller (+ Giveaway)

September 27, 2013 |

This is a not-a-review of a book I had the honor of reading last year around this time in manuscript form and I don’t feel right giving an objective review of the book because I can’t.*


Where the Stars Still Shine is Trish Doller’s sophomore novel, and as you might remember, I thought her debut Something Like Normal was one of the strongest books I read last year. Where the Stars Still Shine is quite different, but it’s as tightly written and compelling. It’s a book that’s stuck with me since then and one I keep coming back to. I may have even liked it more than Something Like Normal.

Because I want to talk about the things in this book I think make it one to pick up, as well as give a general sense of the flavor of story for read alike and recommendation purposes, there are going to be spoilers. So proceed with that in mind.

Callie’s mother kidnapped her, and they’ve been living on the road, place to place, for a long time. Callie’s never been to a traditional school, her meals have often come from vending machines, and she’s been subjected to repeat sexual abuse at the hands of her mother’s boyfriends. But when the law finally catches up with them and Callie has the opportunity to resume a life of stability in the home of the father she doesn’t really know, she’s both relieved and, of course, nervous about what normal could possibly look like.

As I talked about earlier this year in a post about female sexuality, Callie has agency in the relationship she engages in with Greek boy Alex. And really, what made this book so strong for me wasn’t necessarily the storyline about Callie learning how to reintegrate into a new family life — though that definitely will appeal to many readers — but instead, I found myself wrapped up in the relationship she begins with Alex. He’s attractive and quite easy to like. He could be the easy love interest. But what made him so interesting to me is how not easy the relationship is because given Callie’s own life, it cannot be easy. She’s nervous and scared, despite what it is she portrays outwardly toward him. It’s real and true to who she is and what her own experiences in intimate situations have been. But as she learns to trust the world around her and trust herself, she’s able to have a satisfying relationship that is truly earned, rather than given.

From the standpoint of romantic relationships, Doller’s book would make an excellent read alike to Lauren Myracle’s The Infinite Moment of Us. And like Myracle’s book, there’s no holding back on honesty in the writing. It’s mature and straightforward.

From the standpoint of the story’s exploration of what it means to be a family and what it means to have to sew together a life when you’ve never had the promise of stability, Doller’s book makes a strong read alike to Emily Murdoch’s If You Find Me. They aren’t the same book, but they share common elements of reintegrating into a family, of an absent and abusive mother (in both the absence and the presence), and both feature pretty great adults, as well. Doller’s book skews more mature, not just from the aspect of older characters (Callie is 17) but in content as well.

Where the Stars Still Shine has a strong and vivid setting, too. It’s set in Tarpon Springs, Florida, which has a huge Greek community, among other things. Jenna at Jenna Does Books did a series about Tarpon Springs, with photos, that’s worth checking out. The book is set during the late fall and early winter, so the setting is even stronger as it’s not portrayed as a tourist town or a place that’s experiencing an influx of visitors. It’s just what it is and where it is. In many ways, it’s reminiscent of Sarah Dessen’s The Moon and More — it’s a story about what happens to those who call this place home, rather than those who call it a reprieve from home. I do think readers looking for a book to turn to after Dessen will find a lot here to enjoy.

Want a chance to win a copy of Doller’s book? I’ve got one to give away, courtesy of Bloomsbury. I’ll pick a winner in a couple of weeks.

* Disclosure: Trish sent me a copy of the manuscript to read early on because we’re friends. 

Filed Under: Uncategorized, Young Adult

Colorful Covers

September 26, 2013 |

A couple of years ago, there was a big brouhaha over how dark some people thought YA books had gotten – and I don’t mean just the contents. Many people decried the seemingly overwhelming amount of black covers, drawing the conclusion that the color of the covers reflected the darkness of its contents.

I have opinions on this (naturally), but that’s a topic for a whole other post (or several posts). What I did want to mention now is that I’ve actually seen a major growth in the amount of color being used on YA covers recently, most specifically fantasy covers. In particular, cover artists and designers seem to favor mixing blues, pinks, and purples in really striking ways. 

I’ve collected a montage of recent titles below that feature this type of color usage. They’re all published in 2013 or 2014. I personally love the color schemes on these. They’re beautiful and quite eye-catching. For now, they stand out because they are so colorful. If more books start following suit, that will obviously change, and they’ll begin to blend in just as the black covers have.

Filed Under: cover designs, Uncategorized

Worldbuilding

September 25, 2013 |

Worldbuilding is so important in science fiction and fantasy. I used to think I was a stickler for really believable worldbuilding, but I’ve come to realize that what I want more is something interesting. I can forgive something that doesn’t quite make sense if it’s different, if it’s unique, if it makes me think “That is so cool.” (This is not to say that glaring worldbuilding holes don’t bother me. They do. But not as much as they do many other avid SFF readers.)

Below are a few recent-ish young adult SFF books that I think present some unique, creative, and interesting worldbuilding. I’ve linked to my reviews where relevant. Note that it’s certainly possible to have fascinating worldbuilding in an otherwise lackluster book, so not all of the books come highly recommended overall. But they did all present something in the worldbuilding that engaged me.

Zenn Scarlett by Christian Schoon
Schoon’s book takes place on a future colonized/terraformed Mars, where a group of exovets care for unusual alien life forms. I loved the creative alien animals, including ones that are so massive, the vet climbs into a pod which is then swallowed by the creature so the vet can work on it internally. There’s also a sentient cockroach, which oddly enough did not give me nightmares.

Half Lives by Sara Grant
Half of Half Lives takes place in a fairly distant future. This section features a strange culture that uses odd slang and makes references that seem familiar, but not familiar enough to be completely recognizable. Learning how this culture is tied to the events of the other half of the book is what makes it really intriguing.

The Obsidian Blade and The Cydonian Pyramid by Pete Hautman
Hautman’s time-travel books are chock full of crazy ideas. They include a couple of very well-realized, very futuristic, and very odd cultures. What makes these cultures so intriguing is the way Hautman reveals how they developed from our own contemporary cultures. It’s fascinating to read about something so bizarre (like a “disease” involving math) springing from something we consider to be very mundane.

Incarnate and Asunder by Jodi Meadows
In Meadows’ world, each person who dies is reincarnated in a new body, her memories intact. It’s a cool plot device but also a fascinating bit of worldbuilding. Imagine the possibilities of an entire culture with a collective memory that goes back centuries. Imagine friendships and relationships that have existed that long, and will continue to exist in perpetuity. How different would those relationships be from our own, relatively fleeting ones?

Vessel by Sarah Beth Durst
Liyana lives in a world where gods can quite literally take over the bodies of humans, who offer themselves as sacrifices to those they worship. I love how the gods here are not imaginary (or simply non-interventionist), but very, very real. I also dug the desert setting, which is a refreshing change from the more cookie-cutter medieval Western European settings found so often in fantasy.

Crewel by Gennifer Albin
Albin’s book straddles the line between fantasy and science fiction. Some inhabitants of Arras, the world in which the book is set, have the ability to literally weave the fabric of that world. These spinsters can change the physical layout of Arras, up to and including obliterating a person out of existence, by weaving (or breaking) threads. It’s an intriguing worldbuilding concept, I think, but a little under-developed.

What other books would you add?

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Fault Line by Christa Desir

September 24, 2013 |

Ani is the new girl. She’s a bit challenging — not exactly “nice,” not exactly “pleasant,” and not exactly the kind of girl boys go wild over because, well, she’s hard. 

Ben is the kind of guy who could be with any girl. He’s charming. He’s attractive. But Ben wants to be with no one other than Ani. Her tough exterior is exactly what he finds attractive. Sure, at first it’s almost a bit of a game to him, but it’s quickly much more than simply getting with the girl who seems too hard to be won over. He finds himself really loving Ani and wanting to spend as much time with her as possible. 

But after the party — one Ani went to and Ben did not — things change. Ani isn’t the same girl she was before. And Ben can’t do anything right anymore. He can’t make her better, despite how much he desperately wants to.

Fault Line is Christa Desir’s debut novel, and it takes a hard topic head-on: sexual assault. Or maybe I should be clearer. This isn’t necessarily a book about what happens to a girl after she’s raped. This isn’t necessarily about who is the perpetrator or who is the savior. It’s a book wholly about what it means to be a victim of sexual assault and sexual violence, and what it means to not know. Because this book isn’t told from Ani’s point of view but Ben’s, we get the story through his perspective as the boyfriend of the girl who went to a party and woke up the next morning in a hospital. 

Ben is the boyfriend of the girl who had a lighter found inside her body after the party. After the party where many heard her talking about how she was going to “get with” a bunch of boys and ended up in a room with one — maybe more than one — boy. After the party where her drink may or may not have been spiked. After the party where she may or may not have given consent for what happened to her and where she may or may not have been the one to insert a lighter inside her body. 

And all Ben wants to do is make Ani feel better. 

When he arrives at the hospital the next day, he’s met by a victim’s advocate, who runs down what she knows of what happened, but more importantly, what next steps he needs to take to ensure Ani is able to best recover. Be there for her, but don’t push her. Don’t beg her for details. And most importantly, never, ever blame her for what happened. She was the victim. What happened to her isn’t her value, and it isn’t what judgment of her as a person should be based upon. 

Desir’s novel about sexual assault from the perspective of a male voice — one who did not initiate the incident — is compelling and honest. It’s brutal and what happened to Ani is incredibly difficult to read, not only as a woman but as a person, period. As much as he wants to protect her, Ben knows there is really only so much he can do. He can BE there for her, and he is. He tries, and even though many reviewers have faulted him for trying too hard, I disagree. Some reviews saying, for example, that his attempt to have sex with her in a very positive, very loving and caring manner, are his attempts at assaulting her himself. When she says no, he stops. He’s not aggressive. He’s trying so hard to offer her the safe and loving feelings she has allowed herself to forget about because those things — those safe things, those good things, those truly intimate things — are what were taken from her and what she believes she does not deserve anymore. 

This book should be talked about for what it covers and how it covers it. It should be talked about because it does offer a lot of tricky territory to talk about. Did Ben go too far in trying to have sex with Ani when she wasn’t ready? What signs did she give him to indicate what her feelings were? 

Beyond those, though, there’s the invaluable discussion to arise here about blame. If a victim can’t remember what happened or was too intoxicated to give proper consent, is what happened to her her own fault? If there aren’t readily named assailants, who is at fault? As the title suggests, what ARE the fault lines with cases like this? Because no date rape drugs showed up in Ani’s system, who gets to make the call of whether or not she had been drugged before she was in a room alone with people? It’s not just a timely story — it’s timeless. These are questions we wrestle with all the time, and they are questions we should wrestle with because the more we open up discourse on topics like sexual assault, on victim blaming, and other heavy hitters tackled in this book, the more we’re able to be better about discussing them. The more we’re able to understand when we’re intentionally or unintentionally perpetrating problematic beliefs and ideas of sex and sexuality. The more we’re able to understand why it is so damn problematic that we look at the girl (or boy!) as the person who was asking for it, rather than the one who became a victim of other people’s inability to control their urges. 

However.

There are many problems with the writing in Fault Line. At times, this book’s agenda is far too obvious. It’s important what messages are conveyed here — don’t blame the victim, be supportive, listen to them — but the way it’s laid down from a volunteer counselor in info dumps is overwhelming and diminishes the characters. Ben is a good guy. He wants to be good. He loves and honors Ani. But he doesn’t get the chance to do that or be that for her because the counselor takes over and tells him what to do, point A to point B. He scoffs at it, even though he follows it. But why can’t he do this and figure it out himself? Why is it handed to him and by extension, handed to the reader? If we want to start a conversation and start thinking about these issues heavily, we need the chance to see them, to absorb them, and to make the sorts of connections we need to individually. In other words….we aren’t living in a world where that sort of clinical speak gets through. It’s through our own actions and cognitive skills we put these things together. 

It was the easy way out. 

My other big criticism: why do we need the prologue? Why is it the most crucial scene in the book, the one that ultimately changes Ben’s actions, is what we lead with? It kills tension, it kills growth, and it kills the impact of the story when we get the apex to kick off the book. We know almost immediately that Ani’s story isn’t going to have a positive resolution, and by leading off with this, Fault Line manages to simply shock. Where others have found the lighter to be the shock value moment in the story — and I never did because it felt real and authentic and absolutely gut-wrenchingly awful — for me the teacher scene opening the story was the shock value moment. Had it been left only at the end, I’d have felt much differently. It was resolution and closure, however uncomfortable. But opening? It was just there to shock. 

This book would make for a killer pairing with Erica Lorraine Scheidt’s Uses for Boys in talking about sex. Neither book is shy. Neither book is afraid to put the characters into positions that are uncomfortable to read and uncomfortable to think about or talk about. But they both are important in advancing conversations we need to be having. Obviously, this is a book to also pair with Laurie Halse Anderson’s Speak and maybe even more so, Chris Lynch’s Inexcusable. This is a book many people will be divided on, and I suggest spending some time reading the low-rated reviews over on Goodreads because they’re eye opening. 

I . . . have to talk about the cover of this book because it is perhaps the most upsetting element for me as a reader. And not just as a reader, but as a person who is exceptionally careful about and sensitive to discussions of rape and victimization, and as a librarian who understands full well the intentions behind the image choice here. It’s a striking and appealing cover, isn’t it? It’s gender neutral, and I’d go as far as to say it does an excellent job of appealing particularly to male readers because it features a lighter, a catchy title, and the author’s name isn’t obviously feminine. The tag line “Who do you blame?” is enticing. The entire package begs to be picked up, particularly to male readers. Going to the back cover, too, readers will know the story is told from Ben’s point of view. It’s a male voice with a male-driven cover. 

But I take mega issue with the lighter as the image choice.

That lighter was an object that violated Ani’s body. 

Fault Line isn’t Ani’s story — it’s Ben’s story. And Ben’s story only exists because of what happened to Ani. Her story becomes his story. That’s fair and realistic and I think it’s what makes Desir’s book stand out in many ways. We get to hear what it means to be the one who is helpless and what it means to stand by someone who has been victim of something horrific.

That lighter was an object that violated Ani’s body, though. Had the book been told through Ani’s point of view, that cover would represent her reclaiming her body vis a vis the object. It would be her ownership of story.

But on the cover of Ben’s story? That lighter represents the story he steals from her. It’s there as shock. It’s there to sell her story in an enticing way. That lighter is not Ben’s. It does not belong to him. That part of the story is not his nor will it ever be. It’s a lighter that traumatized Ani. 

This cover steals her story as a means of selling his. 

I’m really uncomfortable with that, and I really dislike that as a means of reaching a certain readership, that is the choice that was made. In many ways, that choice does precisely the opposite of not only what the story aims to say, but it does precisely what has happened in the high-profile sexual assault and rape cases we hear about everywhere. Steubenville is about the football players and what happened to their poor beautiful bright careers. It’s never about the girl who they victimized. Her story is co-opted. It’s not fair, and the longer I’ve thought about this cover, the more uncomfortable and upset it’s made me. Because it does exactly what it should not be doing. 

For me, the cover undermines a lot of the positive in the book, whether that’s fair or not. To make the point the book attempts to make, the cover steals that away. And that’s unbelievably unfortunate. While it might get new readers to pick up the book who may have otherwise scoffed at the idea of a “rape story,” I certainly hope they reflect upon that choice. Because it reinforces a lot of what the story attempts to dismantle. We take a step forward in the story to protect the victim, to honor her and listen to her. But then we take ten steps back on the cover because this isn’t her story, but we’re going to sell the book with the object of violation. There’s a disconnect.

Fault Line will be available October 1 from Simon Pulse. Review copy received from the publisher. 

Filed Under: Uncategorized, Young Adult

Banned Books at Book Riot

September 23, 2013 |

I’ve got a post over at Book Riot today and wanted to link it over here and add a little bit more commentary. I’m talking about all of the challenges and book bannings that have happened over the last month.

I wanted to talk about this for a couple of reasons. First, I hate the idea that we celebrate banned books. I think it’s terrible we celebrate the banned books aspect, rather than celebrate the other angle to it, which is intellectual freedom. We need to celebrate the freedom to choose, rather than the items that become representative of what happens when that right is taken from us.

Second, I think it is important to consider how much attention the recent invitation-revoking and removal of Eleanor & Park from Anoka County has received — and where it’s come from. The impassioned pleas people have written in defense of the book and the author’s visit aren’t coming from within the book community. They aren’t coming from the library world or the publishing world. They’re coming from the main stream, including NPR and The Toast. I think this is incredibly important and it leaves me wondering what would happen if this sort of widespread attention could be given to the other books challenged or banned this month alone.

Note the range of books I’ve talked about, too: they all feature “outsiders.” Chew it over. Imagine what would happen if we got angry about all of this and were able to better shine light to it outside our own world, where we are well aware of this sort of thing happening. How do we keep grabbing wider attention?

Filed Under: book riot, Uncategorized

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