Cozy Reading Corner


'My Most Excellent Year' by Steve Kluger

 tháng 1 31, 2018     Steve Kluger     No comments   


From the BLURB:

Best friends and unofficial brothers since they were six, ninth-graders T.C. and Augie have got the world figured out. But that all changes when both friends fall in love for the first time. Enter Al‚. She’s pretty, sassy, and on her way to Harvard. T.C. falls hard, but Al‚ is playing hard to get. Meanwhile, Augie realizes that he’s got a crush on a boy. It’s not so clear to him, but to his family and friends, it’s totally obvious! Told in alternating perspectives, this is the hilarious and touching story of their most excellent year, where these three friends discover love, themselves, and how a little magic and Mary Poppins can go a long way.

‘My Most Excellent Year: A NOVEL OF LOVE, MARY POPPINS, AND FENWAY PARK’ is a junior-YA novel that advanced Middle Grade readers would also enjoy, written in 2009 by American author Steve Kluger.

I actually read this book last year – though “inhaled” might be more accurate. But I needed to sit on it for a bit before writing a review, because I did read it in a fever I wanted to let that break first. Since then I have done a re-read (albeit – a fairly fast one, flicking through to get to my favourite parts) and now I feel I can most confidently say …

This has become a new favourite beloved book for me. Absolutely!

On the surface, this book is trying to do a lot. And at 403-pages, it almost seems too ambitious. Then when you start breaking down the plot, Kluger does indeed seem to be in waaaaaaay over his head.

To begin with; there are three teen narrators, plus the occasional cameo by their adult parents.

There’s Anthony Conigliaro Keller (‘TC’ for short), Alejandra Perez, and Augie Hwong. Ostensibly they’re each narrating using the classroom English assignment, answering a question about their ‘Most Excellent Year’.

The adult cameos are all done in epistolary form – things like Augie’s critic mother, using snippets of her newspaper arts column. But the more interesting (and mini, contained secondary story in itself) comes from TC’s widowed father, Ted, who has an ongoing email exchange with one of TC’s teachers, Lori – which is 100% tentative flirting that morphs into an outright relationship (with a little extra help and advice occasionally, from Augie’s father to Ted). There’s also memos written on ‘The United States Secret Service’ stationary from one Agent Clint to Alejandra, whom he used to guard because her father is an international diplomat.

…. Okay. And that’s JUST the secondary adult characters.

See what I mean about Kluger appearing to throw everything in, *including* the kitchen sink?!

BUT IT WORKS. I promise you.

The teens each have their own distinctive first-person voices and interesting backgrounds/character-arcs, but they also beautifully harmonise together.

TC’s mother died when he was six, and he’s still coming to terms with how to miss her and grieve, without always being sad. He’s also crushing hard on the new girl at school, Alejandra ‘Ale’ and devising a plan to sweep her off her feet – while also becoming a big brother figure to an orphaned young boy called Hucky, who’s almost as big a baseball fan as TC himself.

Augie has designs on being a Broadway star one day, and figuring out his complicated feelings for classmate Andy – and grappling with having to tell his parents how he feels about boys. While Ale is trying to figure out how to break it to her professional politician parents that she’d rather pursue a singing career than a senate one (she’s also grappling with her burgeoning crush on inappropriate TC – who reminds her of a Kennedy brother).

TC and Augie are more like brothers than best friends – to the point that their parents collectively think of them both that way too, and they each have a carved out space in the other’s home for their constant sleepovers. Their friendship began at the age of six, right around when TC lost his mother … and it has grown deeper and stronger ever since. This year – the boys’ Most Excellent Year – they’re each helping the other to figure out their respective loves (Ale and Andy) and their general place in the world.  

So. There is a lot happening here – and these stories and narrators are constantly interchanging and handing the narrative down the line, like a baton relay race that keeps the whole thing moving at a clip. I will say that the arc about orphaned boy Hucky being taken under TC’s wing (and then – by extension – under Augie and his family’s too, and Ale also) does become the orbiting focus by the second-half.

But Kluger covers a lot here. TC and Ale’s unfolding romance – which goes from hostility (on Ale’s part) to begrudging interest and then mortified reciprocation is one finely plucked tune. As is Augie’s realisation of his sexuality and first fluttery (and returned) feelings for classmate Andy.

Augie’s storyline is probably a stand-out, for being so unique in this junior/MG realm. What I loved is that it becomes more than apparent (through email exchanges amongst the parents, and TC’s interiority) that everyone knows Augie is gay, and they’re all excited to see his unfurling feelings for Andy come to light … but they’re also very aware of needing to let Augie come to this realisation himself, and tell them all himself. It’s a beautiful telling, and because Augie is probably the biggest scene-stealer, with the funniest chapters it’s really wonderful how Kluger manages to play his romance (and occasional bump/heartbteak) with Andy on a much more tender and harmonious note.

This novel shouldn’t work. On paper it’s all over the place, and trying to be and do so many things. But Kluger plays it beautifully. Like I said – the fact that each teen narrator (plus their parents, providing filler-context) each gets a turn at moving the story along, it does have a rollickingly good pace. Ale, TC and Augie each have such distinctive voices too – and that’s where Kluger shines, is in his characterisation and ear for voice/dialogue.

‘My Most Excellent Year’ doesn’t just feel like it could have been three books, mashed into one. Realistically Kluger could have taken any one narrative arc and made an entire novel out of it – but putting them all together gives these kids and their stories such robust life … it puts a delicate point on the changes kids go through at this marvellous, ever-moving age when they start defining who they are by what they love. When they start figuring themselves out. It’s honestly, such a glorious 403-pages of tenderness and hilarity, truth and heartache. I loved it, I loved it, I loved it. I want to read more just like it but, sadly and gladly, I think Steve Kluger and this book are in a league all of their own.

5/5 

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'The Ones Who Got Away' #1 by Roni Loren

 tháng 1 22, 2018     Roni Loren, The Ones Who Got Away     No comments   


From the BLURB:

Liv's words cut off as Finn got closer. The man approaching was nothing like the boy she'd known. The bulky football muscles had streamlined into a harder, leaner package and the look in his deep green eyes held no trace of boyish innocence.

It's been twelve years since tragedy struck the senior class of Long Acre High School. Only a few students survived that fateful night—a group the media dubbed The Ones Who Got Away.

Liv Arias thought she'd never return to Long Acre—until a documentary brings her and the other survivors back home. Suddenly her old flame, Finn Dorsey, is closer than ever, and their attraction is still white-hot. When a searing kiss reignites their passion, Liv realizes this rough-around-the-edges cop might be exactly what she needs...

‘The Ones Who Got Away’ is the first book in a new contemporary romance series by US author Roni Loren.

The basis of this new series is a group of high school classmates who were the survivors of a shooting. When the book begins, they’re all coming home for the first time to participate in a documentary about the tragedy – with the purpose of raising funds for a charity. We meet a group of female classmates who were not friends before the shooting occurred, but who banded together in its aftermath and even made a pact to live lives that would honor the deceased.

One of the women is Liv Arias, who has a story of heartbreak within the wider tragedy. She was the poor girl from the wrong side of town, secretly dating rich and charismatic Finn Dorsey – at the time of the shooting they were locked in a closet together, and locking lips … until shots were heard, and Finn left Liv alone to go and find his “real” date, and in doing so led the shooter right to Liv’s hiding place. She was spared, but she hasn’t seen Finn since he skipped town after graduation until now.

I really liked the set-up of this series. Under a different author, it could have been a gauche and clumsy premise – but Roni Loren hits subtle notes of grief and trauma. I think part of the success is that she doesn’t give us flashbacks to the high school shooting itself, but focuses entirely on the grown adults who are still dealing with the consequences of the horror, even twelve years after the fact.

I will say that Finn’s background is slightly outlandish. When he attends the reunion, he’s coming off the back of an FBI undercover stint that saw him assume a new identity for two years. There’s a whole thing about how he joined the FBI to somehow seek retribution against the gun-runners who sold the weapons to the teen offenders of his high school’s shooting. Yeah. It’s a lot. And never really works in the plot. Loren could have more plausibly just had him in law-enforcement, or military etc. as a way to combat his fear of victimhood and had an equally convincing background – instead it’s that, coupled with a white-knight savior complex and it’s a character development she works hard to seem plausible, but never really does.

More importantly – his and Liv’s romance is HOT and on-point. Part of me was actually hoping to get flashbacks to their teen-selves, because that young and fraught romance sounded delicious. But I am really glad that we only get them in the here and now, because Roni Loren layers their tensions so beautifully … and I don’t think it would have worked if we’d just met them with teen-angst and socio-economic divide. It’s better to meet them with that history from their teen years, plus the tragedy, plus time. It dials them up to about 1000 and makes their romance that much more delicate and white-hot.

Like I said – the one drawback was Finn’s OTT back-story in the FBI. But overall this was a solid set-up to a contemporary series, and I’m already looking forward to book 2 – coming out in June.

4/5


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Fence #1 and #2 by C.S. Pacat and Johanna the Mad

 tháng 1 10, 2018     C.S. Pacat, comic, comic book, Fence, Fence Comic, Johanna the Mad     No comments   


From the BLURB:

Sixteen-year-old Nicholas Cox is an outsider to the competitive fencing world. Filled with raw talent but lacking proper training, he signs up for a competition that puts him head-to-head with fencing prodigy Seiji Katayama...and on the road to the elite all-boys school Kings Row. A chance at a real team and a place to belong awaits him—if he can make the cut!

‘Fence’ is a new young adult comic series from Boom! Box, written by C.S. Pacat and illustrated by Johanna the Mad. It launched in November and only two issues have been released so far – but it is going to be a once-a-month schedule, with the first Volume of issues 1-5 due for July 2018 release.

First of all – Boom! Box (or, Boom Studios) is hella smart. They are the publisher behind what feels like a new wave of comic books – ones that are more diverse, inclusive and directly aimed at a young generation who weren’t previously swayed by the offerings of Marvel and DC. Boom is responsible for such groundbreaking and popular series as Giant Days, Goldie Vance, Misfit City and perhaps most popular of all among certain fandom’s  - Lumberjanes.

Boom are also part of a new era in comic books fusing with fiction writers like never before, and especially those who have appeal to younger (teen, mostly) readers – such as Rainbow Rowell partnering with First Second Books for a graphic novel called Pumpkinheads, to be illustrated by Faith Erin Hicks and releasing in 2019.

Boom inviting C.S. Pacat to create her own YA comic book was a bold, and smart move. Given that Pacat didn’t launch her career (into the stratosphere!) with a YA series, rather her debut ‘Captive Prince’ trilogy was LGBT fantasy romance (some would say erotica, at times) that found a huge teen fanbase because it started life as an online serial of original fiction that went viral, before being acquired by traditional publisher Penguin Random House. In any case – Pacat’s series became huge, particularly in the ways it highlighted and proved young people’s craving for more LGBT stories across all genres.

Giving her the reigns to develop her own comic series at the height of this popularity is pure genius – and it pays off (tenfold) in ‘Fence’. Set at the prestigious Kings Row boarding school and following a group of boys trying to come together as an elite fencing team to take out the top-ranked competitors. The series is focused on rivals, teammates and roommates Nicholas Cox and Seiji Katayama.

Two issues in and this world already feels so full and vibrant (a testament to this is how it’s already impressively sparked Tumblr imaginations). There’s a huge focus on rivalries and love affairs, skeletons in the closet and backstabbing afoot. The series has echoes of 2001 film ‘Lost and Delirious’ for me, maybe with a little ‘One Tree Hill’and a feel of something like ‘Kids on the Slope’ or ‘From Up on Poppy Hill‘ thrown in. But honestly, ‘Fence’ is so wholly original it’s hard to quite put your finger on all that it evokes. Except to say it’s building a wonderfully full cast of characters, based in a small student community and with so much room for drama and emotional action – I’m already salivating at the possibilities!

Illustrations by Johanna the Mad make me crave this being turned into an animated-series, even though it would work equally well as live-action drama there’s just something about the art that sumptuously fits the whole unique story.

If you haven’t already, do start collecting all the ‘Fence’ issues and jump on this series bandwagon – I guarantee that even these two issues will fuel your imagination for what’s to come, and if that’s the case you can easily tap into an already very full and vibrant fandom that’s emerged in the wake of its decadent genius.

-->
5/5

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  • the dream thieves
  • The Four Horsemen
  • the geography of you and me
  • the girl from the well
  • The Hairy Bird
  • the haunting of gabriel ashe
  • the hunger games
  • the hunt
  • The Kingmaker Chronicles
  • the murder complex
  • The Ones Who Got Away
  • the only thing to fear
  • The Original Heartbreakers
  • the polaris uprising
  • The Ravenels
  • the rule of three
  • the rules
  • the secrets we keep
  • the summer palace
  • The Survivors
  • the tragic age
  • the trap
  • the wicked we have done
  • The Year The Maps Changed
  • til death
  • titans
  • Tomorrow When The War Began
  • Toni Jordan
  • trisha leaver
  • TV series
  • TWTWB
  • veronica rossi
  • vicious feast
  • victoria aveyard
  • victoria schwab
  • victoria scott
  • Vikki Wakefield
  • waiting on wednesday
  • we are the goldens
  • we were liars
  • where the rock splits the sky
  • white hot kiss
  • Will Kostakis
  • Will Trent/Atlanta
  • world after
  • YA
  • Ya Lit Fest
  • YaLitFest

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