Showing posts with label YA Saves. Show all posts
Showing posts with label YA Saves. Show all posts

Monday, January 4, 2016

G. Donald Cribbs - An Interview with Upcoming Debut Young Adult Author of THE PACKING HOUSE!


Young Adult Author G. Donald Cribbs

THE PACKING HOUSE - When sixteen-year-old Joel Scrivener has a raging nightmare in study hall and someone records it on their phone, he awakens to a living nightmare where everyone knows the secret he's avoided for ten years. Reeling from a series of bullying incidents posted on YouTube and an ill-timed mid-year move, Joel takes to the woods, leaving the bullies and his broken home behind. However, life as a runaway isn’t easy. Joel finds it difficult to navigate break-ins, wrestle hallucinations, and elude capture. He races to figure out who his dream-world attacker could be, piecing clues together with flashes of remembered images that play endlessly inside his head. Besides these images, the one constant thought occupying Joel’s mind is Amber Walker, the girl he’s been in love with for years. Amber sees little beyond the broken boy Joel has become, despite the letters they’ve written back and forth to each other. But Joel is stronger and more resilient than he looks, and it’s time he convinces Amber of this fact, before he runs out of chances with her for good.

 

 

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An Interview with G. Donald Cribbs

Today, I'm very excited to share an interview with the upcoming debut author G. Donald Cribbs. I've known Cribbs through social media for a couple years now. We've become friends and I've had the incredible opportunity to see his debut novel take shape as he prepared it for the rest of the world to read. He is a tireless writer with an impeccable dedication to his craft. I just finished reading the final soon to be released version of his novel THE PACKING HOUSE and I absolutely loved it. Before its release on January 18th, 2016, I wanted to share the author I've come to respect and admire with the rest of my world. So please do read this interview with Donald. And be sure to pre-order his novel The Packing House when you're done. There will be links at the bottom of this post in order that you may do so.

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(Donald and I both agreed that this interview should come with a TRIGGER WARNING. Please be forewarned that there is frank discussion on the topic of CHILDHOOD SEXUAL ABUSE in the transcript which follows.)

 

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G. Donald Cribbs - The Bio:

G. Donald Cribbs has written and published poetry and short stories since high school. Donald is a graduate of Messiah College in English and Education, and is currently a graduate student in Clinical Mental Health Counseling. He and his wife and four boys reside in central Pennsylvania where the author is hard at work on his next book, the sequel to his debut novel, THE PACKING HOUSE (January 18, 2016), by Booktrope Editions. Having lived and traveled abroad in England, France, Belgium, Germany, China and Thailand (you can guess where he lived and where he visited), the author loves languages and how they connect us all. Coffee and Nutella are a close second.

Try This Book On For Size Asked:

1. The Packing House is firmly positioned as an issue book. It takes on arguably the most difficult issue facing children and teens. Sexual abuse…that’s a huge one, especially when the crime is against children. Were you afraid to write this book? Going in, what went through your mind as you set out to write this story?

G. Donald Cribbs Answered:

Forgive my rather lengthy first answer. But this topic requires a look at the cold hard facts, the numbers representing real people, real children who are suffering and struggling with the aftermath of child sexual abuse. With that caveat, let’s dive in.

When I wrote the first draft of THE PACKING HOUSE, the United States population was in the neighborhood of 309 million people. Approximately half are male, half female. According to the research study conducted by the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) on child sexual abuse (CSA), 1 in 4 girls and 1 in 6 boys prior to the age of 18 will experience an unwanted sexual act, either including touch or not. Therefore, more than 64 million are survivors of CSA (38 million girls, 25 million boys). Since then, an additional 3 million survivors of CSA have been born, raising the number of survivors of CSA in the USA alone to a staggering 67 million.

For comparison, the numbers in Canada include a total population of just under 36 million people, with 7.5 million survivors of CSA (4.5 million girls, 3 million boys). These are equally sobering and stunning numbers we need to look at, since silence only enables abusers to continue making these numbers rise.

As a father of four boys myself, I refuse to ignore and remain silent on this issue. The statistics are getting worse, not better. They’re moving in the wrong direction, and I will not let my boys inherit a world where the numbers are 1 in 3 girls and 1 in 5 boys as survivors of CSA. Not one child abused is ever an acceptable number, let alone 75 million in the US and Canada. Does it scare me? Yes. It scares the hell out of me. But I am MORE scared of a world where child sexual abuse is ignored and swept under the cultural rug to avoid unpleasantness. To hell with that.

This issue is also a personal one for me, as a survivor of child sexual abuse.

I wrote it as a part of my recovery. It was both triggering and cathartic to write this out in novel form, giving life and voice to “Joel Scrivener.” Once I started the process, and found my way to Joel, I was primarily focused on how I could convince readers to want to read about child sexual abuse. I mean, really, who wants to read about this topic? So, I had my work cut out for me. In my mind, I constructed a way to hook the reader before realizing they were reading about CSA. I remained conflicted through several years of revisions regarding this duplicity: trick my readers into reading about an unpleasant topic to the point they cannot put it down.

Writers write what they know, which means relying upon personal lived experience to inform the story. While THE PACKING HOUSE is not a memoir, it’s not far from that either. In order to “go there” and write about very personal and very difficult experiences (particularly to relive them the number of times necessary to revise this novel to the quality and level of publishable) I had to get uncomfortably close but find ways to protect myself as well. By fictionalizing my own account, it brought both the distance and the closeness needed to give an authenticity to Joel’s story that would resonate with readers, many of whom could be survivors or their loved ones. With respect to all survivors, I determined to take on this task and write this story. It is my hope others will be inspired to speak up and find their voices, and share their stories as well.

TTBOFS Asked:

2. Your main character, Joel Scrivener, has had a serious life trauma…and yet he does not know what it is. How frequent does this phenomena occur? We see Joel really struggle through the first half of the story…attempting to grasp something that is just outside his periphery. Is this common for victims of childhood sexual abuse?

GDC Answered:

I work in the mental health field currently, and have observed countless children with traumatic histories. There is a strong correlation between trauma and mental health diagnoses. This fact makes me weep. But, it also inspires me daily, working with the next generations’ living heroes. I would rather call them survivors of child sexual abuse, since labeling them a victim could have deleterious effects. As for those who are survivors of child sexual abuse (CSA), suppressing the trauma is a necessary part of the recovery process. Until they have stabilized themselves in the aftermath of abuse, and until they have gained the skills necessary to face their trauma, survivors “forget” what happened to them as a coping mechanism.

It’s one thing to face a bully in school, or deal with the way poverty limits resources; both are genuine struggles teens face today, but for survivors of CSA, theirs is a whole other struggle entirely. Yet another reason we need to speak up and help them discover the truth that they are not alone, and their experience can be validated by those who will listen and offer support.

TTBOFS Asked:

3. Donald, do you feel that writing this novel has, in some ways, excised some of your own demons? How therapeutic was it for you to write this book? Do you want to talk about your own experiences on the subject that you covered in your novel?

GDC Answered:

The short answer is, yes. Yes, I have exorcized the demon that is CSA. Honestly, the demon from Joel’s nightmares represents his abuser, but essentially, he was created to give teeth to the hell Joel goes through awake or asleep. He is not afforded the dignity of rest, of relief from his traumatic past. You could say the demon represents what CSA is to survivors. That might look different from one survivor to another. Those traumatic memories can surface at any time. Sometimes a touch, or a smell, or returning to a specific place can trigger a memory for a survivor.

I said above that it was cathartic to write this book. One of Joel’s biggest hurdles is to find a way to recover his dignity and choose how to share his abuse experience, rather than have it chosen for him the way it was at the beginning of the novel. For many survivors this is a daily lived truth. The lie of CSA is that we somehow “deserved” what happened to us, or “brought it upon ourselves,” neither of which are true. In many ways, the action I took toward CSA by writing this book parallels the same journey Joel takes in the novel.

The experience was not without becoming triggered, and struggling at times. That cost me and my family, my wife and four boys, as I worked my way through a process that took 5 years start to finish. Am I better for it? Yes. I would say I have moved further in my recovery, toward overcomer, the last stage of my recovery model. The model I use runs along a continuum: victim, survivor, thriver, adaptor, and overcomer.

For a chart that explains each of these stages of recovery, as well as other resources for survivors, check out my Pinterest page for Survivors here: https://www.pinterest.com/gdcribbs/for-survivors/
For a frank discussion on the unique struggles male survivors face, check out my interview on two male survivors who are thriving at School Library Journal’s #SVYALit (Sexual Violence in YA Literature) site: http://www.teenlibrariantoolbox.com/2015/05/sexual-violence-for-male-survivors-a-dialogue-between-two-male-survivors-who-are-thriving-svyalit/
A common diagnosis among survivors of CSA is posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). However, it was not until graduate school I learned there is something else: posttraumatic growth (PTG) as an option for survivors. The thing about PTSD is it can be limiting. I will say it is a good starting point, but I would suggest that it should be viewed as a temporary label, that can be revised later once the survivor is ready to move beyond that place. Posttraumatic Growth allows the survivor to use a resiliency-based approach in their recovery. For a discussion on the differences between PTSD and PTG, check out the article I wrote for Stigma Fighters: http://stigmafighters.com/stigma-fighters-g-donald-cribbs/
 
Finally, I will say that one of the greatest purposes in writing THE PACKING HOUSE is to support CSA survivors. With the sale of each book, I will donate 20% to Male Survivor to establish a scholarship survivors can use to attend a Weekend of Recovery. For more information, check out their site: www.malesurvivor.org

TTBOFS Asked:

4. (As an aside, I would like to add that Male Survivor is a lifeline for male survivors of sexual abuse. I have myself gone to two of their WEEKEND OF RECOVERY weekend retreats for survivors. I credit them with saving me and helping me to move from victim to survivor to thriver on my own journey away from childhood sexual abuse victim. Thank you for mentioning them, Donald. And thank you for helping others discover this godsend of an organization. Your donation will be greatly appreciated by them.) With my own writing, I always try to write books that I would have loved to read as a teenager…to get them into the hands of readers who might feel less alone after reading them. The Packing House definitely would have been one for me. Your novel will be a way to begin dialogue on this subject that is becoming less and less taboo. If it reaches victims, it could potentially save them years (decades) of silent suffering. I want you to tell me what it means to you to put this out into the world.

GDC Answered:

I definitely kept that idea in mind: writing the books I needed as a teen, when writing THE PACKING HOUSE. They just didn’t exist back then. Thankfully, I am not the only writer addressing the importance of this topic. Several must read titles include: The Gospel of Winter, by Brendan Kiely, Forgive Me, Leonard Peacock, by Matthew Quick, Boy Toy, by Barry Lyga, Swagger, by Carl Deuker, and The Perks of Being a Wallflower, by Stephen Chbosky, just to name a few. I first learned the concept of writing the books teens need from author Cheryl Rainfield. I have loved every book of hers, and highly recommend reading Scars, Hunted, Parallel Visions, and Stained.

For me, it means I am doing something actionable: to normalize the CSA experience for other survivors by writing Joel’s story, by creating a tool for parents and family members (as well as clinical mental health organizations and professionals) to use in supporting survivors, and in underlining the importance of dialogue and action regarding child sexual abuse (CSA). We need to talk about it, and we need to take action.

TTBOFS Asked:

5. We now know that one of the biggest barriers in the fight against childhood sexual abuse is SILENCE. Essentially, silence kills…it causes the victim to suffer and it protects the perpetrator. If you could start a campaign to end SILENCE, using your novel The Packing House as a jumping off point…how would you go about doing so? And how would you incorporate Joel Scrivener as a poster-child to break down the walls of silence that victims of childhood sexual abuse suffer behind?

GDC Answered:

I would love to see THE PACKING HOUSE used in the way you have just described. That is my vision and dream, and the story is not over with this book. It’s actually book one of a planned duology. Book two is in first draft, and I am about 12,000 words in so far, which is basically the hook. Hopefully it will take substantially less than five years to complete and share with readers. The tentative title is, Unpacking the Past, and picks up right where book one ends. Trust me to tell you, it takes off from there.

The movement you have described can be summarized by the hashtag I created: #YourStoryYourVoice to use on social media to talk about shattering the silence, your voice matters, and your story matters. Don’t allow your abuser to win. Find and use your voice, and speak up. Others, like myself, need to hear your stories, which are just as valid as Joel’s story. Together, we can speak up and end the crippling effect silence has on survivors. Let’s do this.

I am thankful for forerunners, like Tori Amos and her work with www.RAINN.org (Rape Abuse & Incest National Network) and Lady Gaga, whose recent song from the movie The Hunting Ground, addresses sexual assault (SA) on college campuses, a related issue in the sexual trauma category. Her song, “Till it Happens to You” (Listen here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZmWBrN7QV6Y ) was on repeat as I revised part three of THE PACKING HOUSE. She lives nearby in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, and I am so very thankful for her example and for her championing this cause, given her own personal recovery journey with SA. I have learned I am not alone and there is much more to be done.

TTBOFS Asked:

6. How did you begin your journey into WRITER? Did you want to talk about the evolution of your writing life leading up to the release of your debut novel?

GDC Answered:

As a child I found solace in the library. I loved and read as many books as I could get my hands on. My childhood could be described as tumultuous, to say the least. I moved more than fifty times before I turned 18. I was raised by a single mother, who was unlike Joel’s mother described in THE PACKING HOUSE. Despite the upheaval I experienced as a child, books saved me and taught me to tell my own story. Eventually, I would learn to write. I began with simple stories and poems, and this led to some recognition and awards in high school. As an adult, I wrote my first novel in 2010, and revised it countless times in the past five years. Now I am satisfied I have a compelling story to share (thanks to the tremendous support I received from my editor and proof reader), and I hope you’ll find Joel’s story one that touches you in the reader feels.

TTBOFS Asked:

7. The journey to publication is almost over. I watched a lot of the becoming of The Packing House. I was constantly in awe of your dedication to getting it just right. This baby was incredibly important to you. As a writer, I’ve learned a lot from you while watching you go through the editing and rewriting process. It’s done! That must feel like an incredible accomplishment. Not to brush it aside, now, but…here’s the inevitable WHAT’S NEXT question. What does G. Donald Cribbs have in the hopper? With your debut young adult novel finally hitting the marketplace, what are you writing now? Any projects you want to talk about?

GDC Answered:

Kevin, I am so thankful to have found you and your books during my journey of writing and revising THE PACKING HOUSE. Your patience and endurance in reading and reading again the many iterations that were the drafts of THE PACKING HOUSE helped to shape it into what it is today. Without your support, I might have given up and shelved it or “trunked” it, as many writers say. If any of that process helped you in any way, I am humbled and grateful it didn’t drive you insane.

It does feel like an incredible accomplishment. My boys have a father again, and my wife has a husband again. Thank goodness!

One area of growth I am working on as a straight male able-bodied cis Christian man is that despite my past I am privileged. There are many more who are not as fortunate as I am. When I write stories, it is important to me to consider perspectives outside of my own and represent straight and LGBT, male and female, those like my son who face and overcome disabilities and those who do not, cis and trans persons, and others on a spectrum of identity, Christian, Muslim, and other faiths or non-faiths, and those from minority groups who have been significantly underrepresented in history, books, music, the arts, and in many other ways. Mental health, since it is my profession, is important to me to talk about and write about and will likely show up in future books.

TTBOFS Asked:

8. I just wanted to stop you there for a moment. You've brought up a topic I would like to touch on briefly. You speak of the importance of inclusion overall, and of LGBT representation. Did you want to speak to the sexuality confusion faced by your main character, Joel Scrivener, in The Packing House?

GDC Answered:

Joel's sexuality does come to the forefront during his journey as seen in The Packing House. Particularly for survivors who are the same gender, most commonly male-male survivors, this does come up, despite the fact that abuse is about power and control rather than one's sexuality. So, it was important for me to represent the incongruence a survivor must work through in his or her recovery. I introduce this underlying struggle for Joel who is conflicted about identifying himself as either a bisexual or heterosexual person. Another option could be identifying himself as homosexual. But this struggle will carry over into book two, regardless of what happens in book one. I will add that my own sexuality does not matter; it's Joel's story and struggle to tell. Still, it's important to be representative and inclusive when writing about these topics.

TTBOFS Answered:

I knew you would answer that question expertly. Thanks so much for elaborating! Sorry for the interruption. Please continue with the original question regarding your future projects. 


GDC Answered:

No problem at all. Once my first set of books are complete, I intend to write many more books, both standalone and series. I have a dystopian series on twins and diseases that has a neat rescue storyline. I have a fairytale retelling planned based on Beauty and the Beast with a twist. She is the beast, not he. Also, to explain the magic in a magical realism approach, I’m using a steampunk framework to tell the story. That story is next. But there are others, many, many others. I hope you and other readers will stick around. It’s going to be an amazing ride. I do plan to stick with Young Adult fiction to tell these and other stories. Don’t tell anyone but I am a huge fanboy of many YA writers and the books they write.

I look forward to connecting with my readers on social media, and continuing the conversation there. Sometimes, I may be reading or writing instead. I won’t be gone long. If Joel’s story resonates with you, I hope you’ll find your favorite place to post a review so other readers can connect as well. Thank you for reading THE PACKING HOUSE. We should probably hang out and talk somewhere online.

Thanks for having me on your blog, Kevin. I hope this is one of many conversations to move CSA to a place of relevance and urgency, a place that necessitates future discussion and action.

TTBOFS Answered:

I will definitely share my review of THE PACKING HOUSE wherever I can, Donald. It’s an excellent read and an important one. You took on a monumental task and, in my opinion, you scored a homerun. TPH is an entertaining read and Joel Scrivener is a character I will remember for a long time to come. Thank you so much for your time. And, perhaps more importantly, thank you for taking the time to share with my readers your knowledge on the subject of CSA. I wish you the best of success with this novel. May it reach the hands of those who need it most! We look forward to seeing more from you soon! Thank you.


If you would like to pre-order G. Donald Cribbs's THE PACKING HOUSE from Amazon, please click on the book cover below to be taken to Amazon:

http://www.amazon.com/Packing-House-G-Donald-Cribbs-ebook/dp/B019J7MBDS/ref=asap_bc?ie=UTF8
There is an offer for those who pre-order The Packing House early. Please see below for details:

Current offer for first purchasers who let me know:
First 50 who buy Kindle pre-order will receive an eChapbook of FISH OUT OF WATER, companion to THE PACKING HOUSE. First 50 who buy the paperback will receive a signed, numbered, limited edition printed chapbook of FISH OUT OF WATER, designed by the talented Michelle Fairbanks of FreshDesign.


 


Join G. Donald Cribbs online for a book launch party in your pajamas:


Sunday, January 31, 2016


5 p.m. to 10 p.m. EST

Join the TPH release party for book details, fun, games, giveaways, prizes, and more. You never know who might show up! Sign up here to reserve your party hat: FACEBOOK THE PACKING HOUSE RELEASE EVENT!





Tuesday, September 8, 2015

More Happy Than Not by Adam Silvera - A Review




TITLE: MORE HAPPY THAN NOT

AUTHOR: ADAM SILVERA

RELEASE DATE: June 2nd, 2015

FORMAT/PAGE COUNT: Kindle/304 pages

PUBLISHER: SOHO TEEN

PURCHASED: AMAZON

SYNOPSIS: 


In the months after his father's suicide, it's been tough for 16-year-old Aaron Soto to find happiness again--but he's still gunning for it. With the support of his girlfriend Genevieve and his overworked mom, he's slowly remembering what that might feel like. But grief and the smile-shaped scar on his wrist prevent him from forgetting completely.

When Genevieve leaves for a couple of weeks, Aaron spends all his time hanging out with this new guy, Thomas. Aaron's crew notices, and they're not exactly thrilled. But Aaron can't deny the happiness Thomas brings or how Thomas makes him feel safe from himself, despite the tensions their friendship is stirring with his girlfriend and friends. Since Aaron can't stay away from Thomas or turn off his newfound feelings for him, he considers turning to the Leteo Institute's revolutionary memory-alteration procedure to straighten himself out, even if it means forgetting who he truly is.

Why does happiness have to be so hard? (From GOODREADS)

EXPECTATION: Fear? Anxiety? Excitement. I've been planning on reading this one since I first heard about it, a few months before it dropped. I am only now getting around to it. I knew it would cut like a knife. The synopsis told me this much.

REVIEW:

This book sucker-punched me in the throat. It took every thought on homosexuality I ever had and made it a what-if. What if we could have that part of ourselves wiped out of our memory for good? What if we could remove it from who we are, what we are? What if we could escape that life? If we could, would we? I understood immediately the main character's desire to alter his memories and to wipe the existence of his sexuality from his mind. I understood it in a very real and heartbreaking way.

This book messed with my head. I wanted to simultaneously slap the main character across the head, root for him, and watch with anticipation to see if he is ultimately able to escape the imagined death sentence he finds himself in. I was all over the charts on this one...mostly because I think this is something a hell of a lot of LGBTQ teens struggle with. This is a must read. And not only for LGBTQ persons. If you want to see their internal struggle and turmoil, to understand them better--to walk a mile in their shoes--read this book!

The whole premise of More Happy Than Not is essentially about the main character, Aaron Soto, attempting to flee his homosexuality. But where we begin is not really the beginning. Because of the nature of this rollercoaster of a story, we are originally led to believe this is about Aaron coming to terms with the suicide of his father and then his own failed suicide attempt. But that's simply the surface of this amazingly executed tale of homophobia, depression, loss, poverty, friendship, and the awkward and horrific inner turmoil of not being comfortable in one's own skin...with the essence of one's selfness.

One of the first questions I formed as the story unraveled from the original suicide and loss thread, and we began to see the unfolding of Aaron's sexuality questioning while in the throes of a new friendship with a boy named Thomas, was HOW MANY PEOPLE NEED TO ACCEPT YOU BEFORE IT'S OKAY TO ACCEPT YOURSELF? Aaron knew, even as his feelings for Thomas grew, that his friends would not be okay with him liking boys. And there was already a growing strain between him and his friends, possibly as a result of his father's suicide and his own failed attempt...or possibly because of other circumstances not yet revealed to the reader. The reader may have a sense that there is more than meets the eye on this issue. Aaron struggles to come clean about his sexuality even to his mother and brother...even though his mother pointedly tells him she would love him no matter what.

In an effort to forego the struggle of dealing with his burgeoning sexuality, Aaron considers the Leteo Institute's memory altering procedure...maybe he can simply erase the fact that he is gay from his mind. It would answer all his prayers in one fell swoop. He could keep his girlfriend and be straight with her and carry on in a normal heterosexual existence.

Oh yeah, Aaron also has a girlfriend. Genevieve is a visual artist who is very much in love with him...to a point where it is dangerous. She wants him. Even when things start to unravel she still wants to hold on to him. As Thomas comes into his life, Genevieve is temporarily leaving it for a getaway at an art camp. His struggles over not wanting to hurt her upon her return by revealing his secret sexual desires are palpable. But his unnamed secret becomes even more complicated when an incredibly HUGE plot-twist interrupts the forward motion of this story with the expertise and precision of a sword. We, the reader, find that we have been kept in the dark about a few things.

The plot twist works well. At first, I felt a bit violated by the deception...but I almost immediately got over it. It turned out to be an extremely heartrending twist. I did not see it coming, and it served to show the sheer depths of Aaron's sexuality struggles. His struggle is so true and so real and so similar...it cut deep. I can't even begin to count the number of times I wished I could start over...erase everything and simply start over in a more friendly accepting environment. Somewhere, anywhere that accepts you for who you are. But in real life...you're always going to find haters. You will never escape judgement. This is why Aaron considers NOT to alter the opinion of those around him but to alter his own mind instead. But some things come at a price. Sometimes there are even more tragic things than accepting who you are even at the price of losing everything around you.


I found this story to be completely and utterly heartbreaking. But I also found it to be an oasis of hope. Perhaps the LGBTQ youth who read it will find a perverse comfort in it...if only in discovering they are not alone in their struggle at self-acceptance while simultaneously discovering who ultimately will not accept them. Sadly, many of them will far too easily imagine a world where they would erase their sexuality from their memory in order to have a more comfortable existence.

At one point, Aaron states, "I can't believe I was once that guy who carved a smile into his wrist because he couldn't find happiness, that guy who thought he would find it in death." But I can. I can believe it wholeheartedly. It's not easy. And Adam Silvera painted a perfect picture of the struggle. One can only hope that books like this one change people, make them more tolerant. But it's not the LGBTQ people who need to change. It's those who oppose them for simply being who they are...who they unalterably emphatically are. 

 
"I'm more happy than not. Don't forget me." ~ Aaron Soto, More Happy Than Not (Adam Silvera)

SIZE: 5 1/2

Find Adam Silvera online at his WEBSITE, on Twitter, and, on Instagram.


Friday, May 8, 2015

Some Kind of Normal by Juliana Stone is Some Kind of Fantastic! (Review)


Some Kind of Normal
By Juliana Stone
Sourcebooks Fire
May 5, 2015
Praise for Juliana Stone

“Just what readers need.” –School Library Journal

“A contemporary romance with a conscience…Stone writes it with confidence and style.” –Kirkus

“The classic miscommunication, the emotional pushing and pulling, the ‘will she?’ and ‘won’t he?’ of the destined-to-be-in-love. Readers of Miranda Kenneally, Jenny Han, and Susane Colasanti will enjoy Stone.” –VOYA

“A story of family, first love, and forgiveness. I couldn’t stop reading. I loved it!” –Miranda Kenneally, author of Catching Jordan

Book Info: 

What is normal? For Trevor, normal was playing fast guitar licks, catching game-winning passes, and partying all night. Until a car accident leaves him with no band, no teammates, and no chance of graduating. It’s kind of hard to ace your finals when you’ve been in a coma. The last thing he needs is stuck-up Everly Jenkins as his new tutor, those beautiful blue eyes catching every flaw.

For Everly, normal was a perfect family around the dinner table, playing piano at Sunday service, and sunning by the pool. Until she discovers her whole life is a lie. Now the perfect pastor’s daughter is hiding a life-changing secret, one that is slowly tearing her family apart. And spending the summer with notorious flirt Trevor Lewis means her darkest secret could be exposed.

This achingly beautiful story about two damaged teens struggling through pain and loss to redefine who they are, to their family, to themselves, and to each other is sure to melt your heart.




Juliana Stone: USA Today bestselling author Juliana Stone fell in love with books in the fifth grade when her teacher introduced her to Tom Sawyer. A tomboy at heart, she split her time between baseball, books, and music—three passions that carried over into adulthood. When she’s not singing with her band, she’s thrilled to be writing young adult and adult contemporary romance, and does so from her home in Canada.




TITLE: SOME KIND OF NORMAL

AUTHOR: JULIANA STONE
RELEASE DATE: May 5th, 2015

FORMAT/PAGE COUNT: Kindle/304 pages
PUBLISHER: Sourcebooks Fire

PURCHASED: NOT PURCHASED - Net Galley in return for an unbiased review
(
GOODREADS) 

EXPECTATION: This one sounded right up my alley...exactly what I like to read. I had high hopes!


REVIEW


Can we talk about the opening line for a second? 

I used to be the guy who had it all. 

How is that for a hook?! The promise of what was lost, of a dire future. What happened? I love this kind of hook.


I was invincible. I had goals and dreams, and I was damn close to getting them. Until I wasn't.

Stone manages to pull the reader in with just a few sharp sentences that serve to kind of take your breath away. The anticipation of story is palpable.

I love sweet contemporary young adult romance stories. This one hit all the right notes, flawlessly. Trevor and Everly are two characters that will have a place in the hearts of those readers who love Eleanor and Park, and Hazel Grace and Augustus.

Everly is the looks-perfect-to-the-unsuspecting-outside-world heroine with extremely heavy secret issues in the home-camp. Trevor is the boy who was in the wrong place at the wrong time and had all his hopes and dreams dashed in an instant. This set-up almost guarantees a lovely heartening read.

Trevor was in a car accident when his best friend Nate drove under the influence of alcohol. Trevor's hopes and dreams? A rock band. Shooting to the anticipation of stardom and having it ripped away from you just when you can start to taste its sweetness is one of the big issues Trevor faces. But the biggest is the brain injury he suffered as a result of the car accident. Stone portrayed his struggles wonderfully. Trevor was at times inexplicably hostile, scared, determined, and confused. His fear when he started to have seizures was palpable. What began as regret for losing his chance to be a rockstar became something deeper as he began to fear for health itself.

And Everly, though at times in tune with Trevor's coping difficulties, was going through just as huge an issue at home. She is losing all faith in her preacher father, who is keeping secrets that can most definitely shatter her safe and happy family home. And Everly is the only one who knows, or thinks she knows, what those secrets are. As her situation eats away at her like a cancer, the reader can really empathize/sympathize with the huge burden she carries.

One isn't sure which of these two characters is dealing with the heavier load. When one of those characters is suffering a traumatic brain injury that threatens his entire future, it truly is a testament to Stone's ability as a storyteller to make the reader feel just as deeply about the other main character's situation.

Without giving too much of the story away, it was a wonderful ride. The two characters who at first almost loathed the possibility of hanging out with each other fell in love in a truly authentic way. Not instantly. Not perfectly. Not gushingly. At the mere idea of spending his summer being tutored by Everly, Trevor said, "The only thing worse than being stuck in Twin Oaks for the summer without my best buddy, Nathan, is being stuck in Twin Oaks for the summer and having to spend most of my time with Everly Jenkins." That is not a boy who loves a girl. That is outright dread.

But it is in their weaknesses, their individual heartbreak, that Everly and Trevor slowly strip away the wall of dread they have put up against each other. Their brokenness and pain allows empathy to enter into that place where dread and stubborn near-dislike once lived. And in slowly realizing they can talk to each other about their pain, they begin to find a common ground. They kiss.

This is a lovely story. Immediately upon reading the last sentence I downloaded BOYS LIKE YOU, which is SOME KIND OF NORMAL's predecessor. You don't need to read Boys Like You first...but you do learn more about what happened to Trevor in it. AND what happened to Nate after he made that terrible mistake that put Trevor into his new world of brain injury victim. In fact, I liked reading Some Kind of Normal first. Everly and Trevor are two characters who will stay with me for a long time. Stone did a fantastic job sculpting them into real live vibrant characters. You will love them. 

EXPECTATION?: I really adored this book. It surpassed my expectation. Though I will be honest and say I was a bit leery at the onset when it was revealed that Everly was the preacher's daughter. But the issues she dealt with on that front were pretty extraordinary and the possible good girl meets rockstar bad boy cliche was quickly erased in the unveiling of her character. This book is filled with tender moments...I adored it.

SIZE: 5

ALSO BY JULIANA STONE:


Also by Juliana Stone:



NEW IN PAPERBACK!
Boys Like You

Sourcebooks Fire

Book Info: 

Two Broken souls…one hot summer

Nate Everet’s life was all about acoustic guitar, girls in short shorts, and hot Southern nights.Until the accident.

Monroe Blackwell’s life was full of soccer goals, flirty skirts, and bright city lights. Until the accident.

Now Nate has a best friend who might never wake up, a summer of community service, and enough guilt to drown him. Monroe has a family that’s falling apart, a summer of banishment to her grandma’s, and a choking grief that makes it hard to breathe.

Nate and Monroe are two lost souls struggling with grief and guilt. But together, they have a chance at acceptance and finally finding the forgiveness they crave.





And now for a special treat! Here's an excerpt from SOME KIND OF NORMAL...hope you enjoy it as much as I did!




Excerpt from Some Kind of Normal: 
“You got any?” he asked.
“Any what?”
“Tattoos?”
“Me?” I had to laugh at that. Wow. Before last year that would have been grounds for major punishment. Heck, up until my senior year, I hadn’t been allowed to wear lip gloss. Now I wasn’t so sure that my mom would even notice, and since I avoided my dad whenever I could…
“No,” I said, shaking my head. “My skin is untouched.”
His eyes widened a bit, and I felt heat creep up my neck. Great. Now I was blushing again.
“Untouched,” he said with that lopsided smile that made my stomach dip. “I like that.”
“You do?”
“Yep. A clean slate. There’s something almost poetic about that, you know? Tragic too. How many people get a do--over?”
Trevor reached for my hand, and though my first instinct was to snatch it back, his long fingers enveloped mine before I had the chance. He turned my hand over so that my palm faced up and then traced the little blue lines that ran down my wrist.
I can’t lie. It felt weird and good, and my heart took off once more, so fast that I was surprised he couldn’t hear it.
“This is…kind of…like ink,” he said, his words a little slow as if he was thinking hard. “But it’s alive.”
He glanced up again, and all I could do was nod before my eyes dropped to his hand. Mine was still there, small and pale next to his large palm and tanned skin. I saw the thin blue veins that ran down my wrist, the ones that carried blood from my heart, electrifying my cells and feeding my body.
His thumb rested just beneath my pulse, and I swallowed thickly. Crap, he was going to feel how fast it was, and that would be embarrassing.
“Your fingers are rough.” I blushed harder and thought that there was no way I could sound any more like an idiot. Not even if I was trying.
“Yeah,” he answered. “It’s from playing guitar. I practice a lot so my calluses are nice and strong.”
“I used to play piano.”
Wow. Good comeback. I guess it was better than a clarinet or trombone, but really. Dork much?

…Had he always looked this intense?
“What?” he asked. He smiled again and I thought that on a scale of one to ten, his smile was a total eleven. “You’re into the classics. That’s cool. Didn’t picture that.”
“Really. What exactly did you picture?” Shoot. Did I really want to hear this?
“I don’t know. PBS and that Jane Austen?”
Okay. First off, I was impressed that he knew who Jane Austen was, and secondly…he knew who Jane Austen was!
I dropped my eyes, because I was pretty sure that my cheeks were as red as the roses planted just outside the library. Trevor Lewis wasn’t anything like what I thought he’d be. He wasn’t stupid and he wasn’t arrogant. He wasn’t slow or weird.
He seemed pretty normal to me.
You know, for a guy with tattoos and blue hair.


Monday, February 2, 2015

WHEN EVERYTHING FEELS LIKE THE MOVIES by Raziel Reid Spectacular Spectacular!





 
TITLE: WHEN EVERYTHING FEELS LIKE THE MOVIES

AUTHOR: RAZIEL REID

RELEASE DATE: October 21st, 2014

FORMAT/PAGE COUNT: ebook/176 pages

PUBLISHER: Arsenal Pulp Press


PURCHASED: AMAZON KINDLE

SYNOPSIS


School is just like a film set: there's The Crew, who make things happen, The Extras who fill the empty desks, and The Movie Stars, whom everyone wants tagged in their Facebook photos. But Jude doesn't fit in. He's not part of The Crew because he isn't about to do anything unless it's court-appointed; he's not an Extra because nothing about him is anonymous; and he's not a Movie Star because even though everyone know his name like an A-lister, he isn't invited to the cool parties. As the director calls action, Jude is the flamer that lights the set on fire.

Before everything turns to ashes from the resulting inferno, Jude drags his best friend Angela off the casting couch and into enough melodrama to incite the paparazzi, all while trying to fend off the haters and win the heart of his favourite co-star Luke Morris. It's a total train wreck!

But train wrecks always make the front page.(FROM GOODREADS)
 

EXPECTATION: I had high hopes for this book as soon as I heard about it. I kept hearing about the GG and the Canada Reads selection...and it became even more intriguing to me. Then, when I heard about petitions to have the GG revoked and the CR selection rescinded, I knew I had to read it. I knew it would be good.


REVIEW


This is an extraordinary book. I loved the YA voice of the narrator. Remarkable. So authentic, perhaps the most authentic YA voice I have ever read. When Everything Feels Like the Movies is a beautiful tragedy filled with hope and longing. I loved this book. I know it's going to stay with me for a very long time. There were so many things I loved about this book, it's impossible to parse into a review. Jude/Judy is a tour-de-force of a character. From page one I wanted her to succeed in the movie of her life. Filled with unrivaled sarcastic wit, the whole thing was just a sheer delight to read. The grit and reality of the narrator's voice was flawless and fearless. A beautiful novel.

"Our principal, Mr. Callagher, was saying through the speaker that the school was throwing a Valentine's dance, and if anyone wanted to help organize it, they should come to the office and lunch and shove their finger up his ass."
"We'd made the back table ours ever since Angela slept with her second cousin and started keeping a list under the table. We always sat there because she always had a new name to add."
I read almost exclusively on my Kindle app on my smartphone now. I love how you can highlight passages and make notes. With this book, however, I stopped highlighting after about 1/4 of the book. Because I was highlighting everything. The two passages above, I believe, are greatly representative of the impeccable voice of the narrator. I try to read every book as a reader, but I have to admit I read this one almost exclusively as a writer. I was blown away by voice. Yes, it had a story too...a fantastic one...and I realize I haven't really touched on that yet. It's just that it's one of those books that makes me want to try harder as a writer, to cross the lines I shy away from.

When Everything Feels Like the Movies is essentially the story of a teen who is larger than the small town that could never truly contain them. What sets it aside from other stories about breaking out of the small and into the limelight is that the character who is struggling to be contained is trans. Jude (Judy) deals with bigotry at every turn...including at home. But she is still able to dream big and have such lofty glamorous goals for herself. Her almost vulgar egoism and arrogance is a delight. Where it should turn a reader off, it endears her to them. We see the raw vulnerability in her swaggering confidence and self-love. True sarcasm comes not from pride, but from the shaky ego that wants to emulate pride. Jude is such a flawlessly written flawed character. He will remain one of my favourite characters for a long time to come.

Highlights for me? The secretive relationship between Jude and his best friend's brother. And the way the reader can feel the scream of love caught in Jude's throat where his little brother is concerned. The author writes with such a subtle pen...never more so than when he paints the picture of Jude's feelings for his half-brother Keefer. Also, Jude's complicated relationship with his father. The longing in that relationship is so painful. With just a few strokes of his pen, Reid impeccably captured a struggling father/son relationship...with the perfect balance of want and need and outrage. I'm beginning to think the whole book was a highlight for me. Reid drew an amazingly accurate villain in Ray, Jude's stepfather, too. Here was a man who seemed afraid Jude's gayness might transfer to his own son simply through touch or proximity. Again, a flawless rendition of a character...and how Jude's mother repeatedly chose Ray over her own son was also amazingly captured.Yep...too many highlights to speak of.

Be careful what you read about this book. I've seen spoilers after having read it that would have ruined the ending for me. If you want to go into it blindly, try not to read up on it prior to cracking the spine. Even the author himself drops plot spoilers in interviews surrounding the origins of the story. Beware!



EXPECTATION:To be honest, the controversy surrounding this book was a big motivating factor in me deciding to read it. Firstly, it sounded like a wonderful story. Secondly, I have no time for writers who think it's their place to petition to have books stripped of awards they absolutely and definitively deserve. In fact, I was quite disgusted that anyone would try to rally and petition against this book. It met and exceeded my expectations. It has made me want to be a better writer. Naysayers should be ashamed of themselves. The green-eyed monster may have much to do with the bitter pills these petitioners are unable to swallow. I hope with everything I have that this book wins CANADA READS!

SIZE:5.5 It's just too big to fit into 5. Je Suis Jude!