Thanks to the @kidlitexchange network and Inkyard Press for the review copy of this book - all opinions are my own. Every Other Weekend by Abigail Johnson releases January 7, 2020. Mark it on your calendars, because you don't want to miss this one.
Jolene and Adam both come from "broken" families. Jolene has never felt like her family unit was whole, while Adam's is in transition, struggling to repair itself instead of break apart completely. Adam's dad starts renting an apartment in the same building where Jolene's dad lives, and the teens meet by chance. Forget meet-cute - this is meet-strange, and it sets the tone for the friendship that develops between Adam and Jolene.
The story is told in alternating points of view, which works nicely with the overall theme of every other weekend. You don't feel like you're missing out on the characters' "other lives", because the story is so well-developed during those precious weekends.
There are so many beautiful quotes in this book, about family, relationships, and creating art which, for Jolene, is making movies. The situation with the film critic was so well done that I think it almost needs a trigger warning - it was too real, but the resolution couldn't have been any better.
Every Other Weekend is a great unique young adult read that perfectly balances reality with a dose of sweet romance.
Monday, September 23, 2019
Wednesday, September 11, 2019
THE CLASS by Frances O'Roark Dowell
Thanks to the @kidlitexchange network and Simon and Schuster for the review copy of this book - all
opinions are my own. The Class by Frances O’Roark Dowell releases on October 8, 2019, and
you’ll definitely want to get your own copy then!
The Class is told by twenty different
characters, all classmates in Mrs. Herrera’s class. Ellie is an aspiring author
who needs an idea for her next book, so she starts taking notes about her
classmates. She sees a student who used to be a goody-goody starting to turn
bad. She sees boys labeled as “jocks” showing more depth and emotion than she
would have expected. She watches everyone to see how they interact and what
their relationships are like, because Ellie is struggling to find friends
herself. When some of Mrs. Herrera’s special things go missing, all of the
students have their suspicions of who took what, but all these students also
have their own reasons why they might be the thief.
Because of the unique way of storytelling,
the reader doesn’t get any foreshadowing, and can’t put all the pieces of the
mystery together until the book is finished. Each character has a distinct
voice that will make the reader think of students in their own classes - I know
it did for me! I can’t stress the positivity of this enough - it makes you see
things from other people’s points of view, including how and why they act the
way they do. I think this is so important in building empathy, especially in a
school setting when it’s so easy to dismiss others as “weird”, “loud”, “good”,
or “bad”. I’m going to recommend this as a book club pick for the 6th and 7th
graders at my school - or maybe even share as a group read-aloud. It’s very
powerful and important, while still being an enjoyable book kids of all ages
will want to read.
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