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You are here: Home / Archives for YA

YA

Celebrating Series 1: Diary of a Crush

24th May 2013 By Julianne Leave a Comment

I decided a month or so ago that I wanted to start a new regular feature, and after a few ideas my mind turned to series. I’ve always loved reading series. I like falling in love with characters and following them over multiple adventures, seeing where the stories take them and how they grow and change. I’m addicted to the thrill of opening the next book and finding out where the characters have got to.

However, I often neglect them. It’s easier to pick up a standalone and review it, especially if you’ve read it before. Series require upkeep and hours of rereading if you really want to do them justice in a review, and that’s where this feature comes in. Celebrating Series posts will be overviews, rather than detailed reviews of each book. This will allow me to share my enthusiasm for series I’ve read in the past, even when it isn’t convenient for me to re-read every book. I can also use them to spotlight series that I’ve already reviewed, when I think they deserve a bit more praise and attention.

I can even use them to kick off themed weeks, like I am doing here!

 Diary of a Crush, in all the forms I own! From the top: Atom’s new edition of French Kiss, free with J-17 books Losing It and American Dream, the first Bite editions of the trilogy, and finally, my J-17s! I still love the puntastic, content-relevant spines. ‘Same Old Brand New ‘Do‘ will probably make no sense if you were born after 1989 or not in the UK…

I chose the Diary of a Crush trilogy for my first Celebrating Series week, because a) it will be back in print next Thursday, and b) to force myself to stop procrastinating on my reviews!

The series is about a girl named Edie who moves to Manchester from Brighton and develops a crush on Dylan, a beautiful but moody art student (or artboy, for short). Her feelings are so strong that she can’t help feeling painfully awkward whenever she’s around him or his friends. While working together on a photography project he kisses her, only to start ignoring her almost immediately afterwards. With Dylan switching from hot to cold all the time, and her new friend Mia tugging her into a whirlwind of drama, Edie quickly starts getting fed up of being a shy pushover. The three books deal with the not always lovely reality of being in a relationship, from difficult beginnings to adult decisions, and each of them involve some kind of travelling. French Kiss, naturally, features a college trip to Paris, Kiss and Make-Up, a music festival, and Sealed with a Kiss, a roadtrip across the USA.

This is one of my favourite series of all time, and I have read the books so many times I have lost count. I spent most of my teen years wanting to be Edie, and wanting to date Dylan. When I started reading YA again as an adult, with my newly developed critical eyes, I read lighthearted books and serious books, books about families and books about boyfriends. Quickly, I worked out what I enjoyed the most, and what spoke to the part of me that is stuck forever in her teens. The books I loved had something special about them, the same thing that made me obsess over Diary of a Crush. Eventually I worked out what it was, and why I loved it so much more than almost any other teen book I’d read. It’s aspirational.

To my mind, aspiration means something more than wanting the hot boyfriend, though of course Diary of a Crush made me want to snog an artboy – I defy anyone to read it and not want to start hanging around the Tate Modern to check out the eye candy (greatly recommended as a post-Diary of a Crush adventure, have done it multiple times). I coveted Edie’s life. I was jealous of her job and band and friendship with Shona and Poppy. It made me want to have more friends and to go
places and do creative things.

Honestly, the nostalgic love I have for these books means that I struggle to say anything negative about them. I think that objectively, Let’s Get Lost, Nobody’s Girl and Adorkable are better written, and it does slightly bug me that some of Edie’s friends from the first book disappear or almost disappear later on, but these are the books that gave us Dylan and that started Sarra Manning off on the glorious path of writing books about people who kiss first and engage the brain cell later, and more importantly, girls who grow in confidence as they grow in experience. I will always have a crush on Diary of a Crush.

Next up: I review the new edition of French Kiss and ruminate upon the fact that artboys were actually better dressed in the mid-noughties…

Filed Under: Book Chat Tagged With: Celebrating Series, Diary of a Crush, Diary of a Crush week, Sarra Manning, teen fiction, teenage fiction, UKYA, YA, young adult

Book Review: Pushing the Limits, by Katie McGarry

11th May 2013 By Julianne 3 Comments

Echo Emerson wasn’t always an outcast. Last year, she was popular, an accomplished painter, on the school dance team, and dating Luke, one of their school’s top sports players. She had everything, at least on the surface,  though she was struggling to deal with her parents’ divorce and the death of her brother Aires in Afghanistan. But that was all before the incident at her mother’s house one afternoon that left her with scars on her arms and torso, and no memory of what happened. She knows her mother was responsible, and that now there is a restraining order to keep her away, but nothing more.The only thing Echo is looking forward to is leaving to go to university, but her father won’t let her take art classes anymore, pressuring her to study accountancy at university instead.

Mrs Collins, the new school counsellor, doesn’t seem much better than all the other professionals Echo’s seen since the incident, but then she offers her an opportunity to make some money, which Echo desperately wants so that she can finish fixing up the car that Aires dreamed of getting running.

To earn this money, Echo has to tutor Noah, our other narrator: failed by the social care system, angry at the world, but desperate to gain custody of his younger brother once he graduates. Echo and Noah both resent this setup at first, despite their mutual attraction, but slowly they become an important part of each others’ lives.

I have to guiltily confess that my expectations of Pushing the Limits were not that high. It’s been changed on the final edition, but the tagline on the front of the proof copy (received at the first Mira INK bloggers’ party) is ‘A bad boy. A lost girl. An unforgettable love’. I do not generally like ‘bad boys’ as love interests, and despite all the positive reviews I’d read I just didn’t think that Pushing the Limits could be that good. I was wrong. I loved it from the start.

I thought the characterisation was just fantastic. Of course I loved tentatively willful Echo, desperate to find out what exactly her mother did to her and struggling to break free from her father’s control, and determined Noah, who is full of angry emotions yet loves his brothers above all else, but the secondary characters are interesting and well-developed as well. Mrs Collins is clever but flawed, excellent at understanding the teenagers but a terrible driver, and usually right, but not all the time. Echo’s dad is demanding and controlling but we can see that he does want the best for Echo. Echo’s mother, probably the most challenging character to portray fairly, is frighteningly believable. I also loved Echo and Noah’s friends – beautiful Lila, who is always on Echo’s side, provides a nice contrast with impatient and socially-paranoid Grace, and Isaiah and Beth are essentially Noah’s true family, both caring towards him and self-involved at once. Even when the characters behave selfishly, they still have sympathetic elements, so no-one that features ‘on screen’ is easy to hate.

I loved Echo and Noah’s relationship – yes, the scenario in which they get together isn’t the most likely or original, but they seemed like a believable couple. They’re in lust from the start but when their feelings develop, it doesn’t seem rushed, and when they have relationship troubles, Noah gives Echo the space she needs, unlike some fictional couples that harass each other until they give in, something which is presented as romantic but isn’t the healthiest or most successful technique in real life.

The novel is in first person; the chapters alternate between Echo and Noah’s narration. Katie McGarry takes full advantage of this to show us the differences in the ways that Echo and Noah view each other, their relationship, their friends, Echo’s father, and life. They very rarely agree on anything immediately, and the alternating chapters make it clear to the reader when they are interpreting events and the motivations of other characters through their own biased lens. For example, Echo sees her father as overbearing and controlling, and is convinced that he doesn’t love her, but Noah sees him in quite a different way.

Some of the dialogue was a little stilted, and both narrators, but especially Noah, suffered from the oft-bemoaned YA cliché of mentioning eyes/hair/scent too much. I did roll my eyes every time someone’s scent was mentioned, but then I always do because I almost never notice anyone’s smell, and if it is them and not perfume, then it’s terrible BO, cigarette smoke, or just a nice human-y smell. Not vanilla or cinnamon or woodsmoke!

In terms of plot, I have to admit that I guessed how things would work out for Echo and Noah at just a few chapters in, but there is so much else going on in this story besides the main plot that there were still plenty of small surprises, and the story is so convincing that I didn’t mind at all. My only other criticism is that I didn’t really get much of an impression of the town in which the story is set, but again, I don’t really mind that much as the characterisation is so amazing, and as both a reader and a writer I treasure good characterisation above all else.

In short, Pushing the Limits is an incredible novel that far surpassed my expectations. It’s rare that I read or watch or listen to a story and feel completely sure that the author knows every single one of her characters inside out, the way that Katie McGarry must do. I am thrilled that I already have Dare You To waiting on my TBR pile, and will look forward to her future work – hopefully she has a long and prolific career ahead of her!

Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: American, bereavement, book review, contemporary, disillusioned teenagers, family drama, Katie McGarry, review, teen, teen fiction, teenage, teenage fiction, YA, young adult

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Hi! I'm Julianne and this is my book blog. Click my picture to read more about me.

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