Nicole Reads A Lot

so many books, so little time

Eleanor & Park by Rainbow Rowell

Title:Eleanor & Park
Author:Rainbow Rowell
PublisherSt. Martin's Press
Publication Date:February 2013
Publisher's DescriptionSet over the course of one school year in 1986, ELEANOR AND PARK is the story of two star-crossed misfits – smart enough to know that first love almost never lasts, but brave and desperate enough to try. When Eleanor meets Park, you’ll remember your own first love – and just how hard it pulled you under.
My rating:****

15745753 I was pleasantly surprised by how much I enjoyed this book this book. Eleanor & Park is  about two teenagers who, for different reasons, don’t fit into their 1986 Omaha, Nebraska setting. Eleanor is too big, her hair is too red, and she dresses too oddly. Park is half-Korean and keenly aware that he is different from not only the people in his neighborhood, but also his immediate family. Eleanor, the new kid in school, starts out not knowing anybody, but she and Park soon bond over their shared love of music and comic books.

Eleanor and Park are believable teenage characters, and never seem fake or too grown up, even though they face circumstances that would be challenging for most adults. Watching them learn more about each other, the world, and themselves was an enjoyable journey, and made me want to read everything that Rainbow Rowell ever wrote. ’80s pop culture is front on center in this novel: Eleanor and Park devour Watchmen and swoon over “How Soon is Now.” Even though this is a young adult novel, it is definitely not appropriate for younger teens; the profanity and subject matter addressed in this book would probably be appropriate for readers ages 16 and up. I would recommend this books to adults, too, especially those who remember ’80s New Wave, John Hughes movies, and acid washed jeans from when they first were popular.

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Revenge of the Girl with the Great Personality by Elizabeth Eulberg

Title:Revenge of the Girl with the Great Personality
Author:Elizabeth Eulberg
PublisherScholastic Inc.
Publication Date:March 1, 2013
Publisher's DescriptionA hilarious new novel from Elizabeth Eulberg about taking the wall out of the wallflower so she can bloom.

Don't mess with a girl with a Great Personality.

Everybody loves Lexi. She's popular, smart, funny...but she's never been one of those girls, the pretty ones who get all the attention from guys. And on top of that, her seven-year-old sister, Mackenzie, is a terror in a tiara, and part of a pageant scene where she gets praised for her beauty (with the help of fake hair and tons of makeup).

Lexi's sick of it. She's sick of being the girl who hears about kisses instead of getting them. She's sick of being ignored by her longtime crush, Logan. She's sick of being taken for granted by her pageant-obsessed mom. And she's sick of having all her family's money wasted on a phony pursuit of perfection.

The time has come for Lexi to step out from the sidelines. Girls without great personalities aren't going to know what hit them. Because Lexi's going to play the beauty game - and she's in it to win it.
My rating:****

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I was intrigued by the publisher’s description of this title, and excited when I was granted access to read it. That excitement did not wane while I was reading this book. Despite being a quick read, Revenge of the Girl with the Great Personality is chock full of fairly intense issues. Lexi was a great protagonist: realistic, believable, and sympathetic even when displaying teenage cluelessness. With the exception of Brooke, who was a completely awful human being and lacked anything resembling a redeeming quality, every character in this book displayed the type of depth that makes for compelling reading.

Benny and Cam were  great friends; they were supportive, but not mindlessly so, and it made me happy that Lexi had them in her life. Lexi’s interactions with her parents were painfully realistic, and the rollercoaster nature of her relationship with Mac a great depiction of how siblings get along (or not).

Over the course of this novel Lexi went through a lot. She took some sometimes dodgy advice, followed her heart, left her comfort zone, and learned a lot of painful and valuable lessons. I wanted to stand up and cheer when I got to the end of the book. Nobody saved Lexi, or fixed her, or rearranged her world. No boy kissed her worries away.  Lexi was her own hero, and demonstrated why so many people in this book relied upon the good head on her shoulders (fairly or not)! In addition to being entertaining, I think that this book has a lot of good, non-preachy things to say about figuring out how to balance capability and self-reliance with enriching friendships. I’m recommending this title for inclusion in our young adult collection.

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Nightshade by Andrea Cremer

Title:Nightshade
Author:Andrea Cremer
Publication Date:June 2011
Publisher's DescriptionCalla Tor has always known her destiny: After graduating from the Mountain School, she’ll be the mate of sexy alpha wolf Ren Laroche and fight with him, side by side, ruling their pack and guarding sacred sites for the Keepers. But when she violates her masters’ laws by saving a beautiful human boy out for a hike, Calla begins to question her fate, her existence, and the very essence of the world she has known. By following her heart, she might lose everything - including her own life. Is forbidden love worth the ultimate sacrifice?
My rating:****

Warning, this review is mildly spoileriffic.

This book was certainly an interesting take on werewolves and witches. I wasn’t too sure about this world when I first started reading, but it quickly grew on me. My hesitation was due to the fact that I may have werewolf fatigue (I just finished a review copy of Raven Calls, that review will come out closer to the book’s publication date), and also because the publisher’s description sounds far more insipid than I found this book to be.

There were things about this book that didn’t thrill me. I thought that the Keepers’ rules regarding the purity of female alphas was just to the left of the Taliban’s, and this more than anything helped me get on Team Anybody Else. I’m already against any culture that slut-shames a girl for a kiss but feels that it’s perfectly okay for a boy to sleep his way around the high school. Hey, Keepers, the 50s called, and they want their gender roles back. I also didn’t get why the kids at the school were so afraid of the Guardians. I believe that the explanation provided about how this world works is that the humans did not know what was different about the Guardian kids. Why, then, were they afraid of them? Why were the teachers? What did everybody else think it was that set these people apart? I may reread the early pages of this book and see if I overlooked something.

On a more positive note, I felt that some of the choices the characters in this book made washed away some of the Twilight sludge that has stubbornly stuck to my brain jelly for the last several years. Things that in that series would have necessitated 1) an interspecies altercation or 2) a marriage licence happened here in a nicely understated way. I appreciated how Ms. Cremer gave her characters layers, and even the personalities of the less prominent pack members shone through. My only regret is that my public library’s ebook site is down right now, because I really need to check out the second book in this series!

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Divergent by Veronica Roth

Title:Divergent
Author:Veronica Roth
Publication Date:May 2011
Publisher's DescriptionIn Beatrice Prior's dystopian Chicago, society is divided into five factions, each dedicated to the cultivation of a particular virtue—Candor (the honest), Abnegation (the selfless), Dauntless (the brave), Amity (the peaceful), and Erudite (the intelligent). On an appointed day of every year, all sixteen-year-olds must select the faction to which they will devote the rest of their lives. For Beatrice, the decision is between staying with her family and being who she really is—she can't have both. So she makes a choice that surprises everyone, including herself.
During the highly competitive initiation that follows, Beatrice renames herself Tris and struggles to determine who her friends really are—and where, exactly, a romance with a sometimes fascinating, sometimes infuriating boy fits into the life she's chosen. But Tris also has a secret, one she's kept hidden from everyone because she's been warned it can mean death. And as she discovers a growing conflict that threatens to unravel her seemingly perfect society, she also learns that her secret might help her save those she loves… or it might destroy her.
My rating:****.5

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I love a good dystopian novel, and was interested in Divergent as soon as I read the blurb. Tris was a complex character whose growth over the course of this novel was clear to me, even when she wasn’t sure if the changes she experienced were good. I liked that this book, maybe even more so than the Hunger Games novels, showed that teenagers can be brutal beings on their own right, not only in response to life and death situations. Dauntless didn’t make Peter do the awful things, Peter joined Dauntless because he knew that doing so would give him the opportunity to do awful things. Tris was fierce, in the pre-Project Runway definition of that word. She didn’t take crap from anybody, and constantly did more than people expected her to be able to do. She didn’t magically grow stronger or taller; she used what she had (her small stature, speed, and Abegnation upbringing) to achieve things the others never even considered. Tris was a great protagonist, and the perfect complement to Tobias. I loved that they were each able to be strong for one another when the situation called for it, and that he wasn’t always that one doing the rescuing.

Roth’s world of five factions was well-realized. The book began several generations after whatever war made Chicago turn into this kind of structured/fractured society. I hope that the later books in this series discuss more about how this reality came into being, and about how the factions changed over time to become what they were at the start of Divergent.

Divergent is a great introduction to this series, with enough action that it could be a standalone title, but enough hints at unexplored mysteries to leave me eagerly awaiting the next book.

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