Book Review: Remarkably Bright Creatures

Remarkably Bright Creatures by Shelby Van Pelt

My local library just added Hoopla to their ebooks offerings, so of course I had to check out what new books were available. This one was recommended, and I wasn’t disappointed.

Description

Even though her friends all say she shouldn’t still be working so hard at her age, Tova continues to clean the Sowell Bay aquarium every night. She must keep busy. Otherwise, she might dwell on the loss of her husband, or she might contemplate the continued mystery of her son’s disappearance. She’s never bought into the police’s explanation. Erik would never commit suicide.

As she works, Tova befriends Marcellus, the giant pacific octopus who knows far more than humans give him credit for. He deduces what truly happened the night of her son’s disappearance, and how her young replacement, Cameron, is involved.

Characters

Tova is the type of character you can only truly get to know from the inside. Outside, she is the tough, stoic, particular Swede, but her inner thoughts reveal the depths of her emotions and the vast extent of her kindness. As someone with plenty of Scandinavian blood running through my veins, I bonded instantly with her.

Marcellus’s voice comes infrequently, but it always offers a unique perspective, and his personality shines as much as Tova’s. Likewise, Cameron, struggling to grow up even though he’s passed thirty, provides an interesting contrast to Tova. Their fast friendship feels natural and charming.

Plot

The plot follows Tova as she processes her grief and prepares for the next stage in life, though she could never predict the turns her new friends give her. This isn’t a fast-paced thriller. Rather, it meanders through various characters. The authors ties everything together in a neat bow at the end, making for an immensely satisfying read.

Writing Style

Van Pelt’s style is well suited to the genre. Seemingly irrelevant details add loads of character development, and they never bog down the prose.

Conclusion

The book’s back cover description suggests this story to fans of A Man Called Ove, and as a huge fan of Fredrik Backman, I wholeheartedly agree. Poignant and charming, Remarkably Bright Creatures hits all the right notes for a beautiful and achingly human read.

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Book Review: Letters to the Lost

Letters to the Lost is You’ve Got Mail for the modern teen.

Letters to the Lost by Brigid Kemmerer

I enjoyed Kemmerer’s fantasy series, so I thought I’d try her contemporary fiction.

Description

Juliet is trapped in a fog of grief after her mother’s death.

Declan is trapped by people’s negative expectations.

Juliet can’t stop writing letters to her mother and leaving them on her tombstone, but one day, Declan writes back anonymously. She feels an instant connection to the stranger who seems to understand her pain, and Declan discovers someone who finally sees his side of his difficult past. Soon, they are revealing their deepest secrets and most painful memories to each other, but their realities are too close for comfort, and the truth threatens to destroy the relationship they rely on.

Characters

Juliet can’t stop obsessing over her mother’s death, even though her anger and grief are destroying her remaining relationships. Her one passion, photography, now reminds her too much of her mother, and she struggles in normal teenage interactions. Overall, she comes across as a three-dimensional character whose flaws drive her mistakes.

Declan is the typical misunderstood “bad kid,” the one teachers dismiss as prison-bound and peers avoid. His character arc is less anchored in his personal flaws as it is in the failures of his family members, which makes him a little less personable than Juliet.

Both characters have best friends that are too perfect to be realistic. I know the author was trying to set up a series, but she made Rev too likeable. I can’t imagine why Juliet didn’t guess Rev was her anonymous penpal. The author’s failure to address this felt like an obvious blunder and a wasted opportunity.

What I really appreciated, however, was how each character had one teacher/adult mentor who reached out to them. Often in teen fiction, the adults are all idiots, superfluous, or bad guys, so I liked that some of them, even the flawed ones, were trying to help.

Plot

The plot follows the two characters as they grow closer together, both in their anonymous writing and in their real lives. Each event flows well from the last. I never felt cheated by cheap twists.

Writing Style

Kemmerer excels in the all-absorbing first-person narration quintessential to contemporary young adult fiction. She captures the teenagers’ angst and perspective perfectly. I especially admired her descriptions of how each teenager felt their emotions physically—so much more than the cliched butterflies in the stomach.

Miscellaneous

The book’s central concept is saddening in its realism. Juliet and Declan form a strong bond because they feel safe sharing their deep feelings anonymously. In the social-media age, I can see how many teenage relationships remain surface-level. I wonder how many teens nowadays are suffering because they have no genuine friendships.

Conclusion

Letters to the Lost is You’ve Got Mail for the modern teen. The story delves into the depths of grief, guilt, and prejudice while maintaining a realistic teenage perspective. The story is all-encompassing in its narration, and delivers a satisfying ending while still driving interest in the next book in the series. I’d recommend this for fans of Laurie Halls Anderson.

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Book Review: Night Road

When you open a Kristin Hannah book, you know exactly what kind of story you’re going to read. Knight Road is no exception.

Night Road by Kristin Hannah

This was another loan from the esteemed Library of Grandma. When you open a Kristin Hannah book, you know exactly what kind of story you’re going to read. Night Road is no exception.

Description

Jude Farraday will readily admit she’s a helicopter mom, but better to be overprotective than aloof, like her own mother. Her precious twins are seniors in high school, a final year filled with opportunities and temptations. As a mother, balancing her desire for her children to enjoy high school with her fear of alcohol and parties is a challenge. When Lexi, a former foster child with a dark past, befriends her kids, she becomes part of the family. The three seemed bound by concrete, but one poor decision may tear them all apart.

Characters

Jude Farraday is a typical middle-aged Kristin Hannah character—anxiety, Mommy issues, successful but not fulfilled. While this borders on cliché, it also gives Jude wide appeal. Pretty much any mother can relate to Jude’s love for her kids. Lexi, likewise, resembles other Hannah down-and-out youths—a good kid dealt a bad hand. Though repetitive when considering her other books, all of Hannah’s characters, including the minor ones, are three-dimensional and well developed.

Plot

The plot jumps through time as the kids grow in friendship, grieve through tragedy, and heal. Hannah pushes the accident’s legal repercussions to the edge of believability, but anyone who has dealt with well-to-do parents will know such a harsh reaction is plausible.

Writing Style

Kristin Hannah is a master at capturing and eliciting emotion with words. Her descriptions not only transport the reader into the story world, but they ring beautifully, almost like music. I particularly enjoy how she captures the sentiment that small things are big things, like when the lawyer loans Lexi a bicycle. If I’m being nit-picky, I’d say Hannah must enjoy clothes shopping, because she describes every character’s outfit, which I found unnecessary but not too annoying.

Miscellaneous

This book is a typical Kristin Hannah book. It repeats her common themes and includes many elements found in her other books—grief-driven pettiness, the power of motherhood, legal technicalities, and children with psychological quirks caused by the adults’ drama.

Though the book doesn’t stand out from her other works in any significant way, such consistency isn’t necessarily bad. Readers know exactly what to expect when picking up one of her books. If you’re in the mood for an emotional journey through grief and heartbreak, Kristin Hannah always delivers.

Personally, I needed a break from this book halfway through because it got too depressing. Again, that’s not the book’s fault. I just wasn’t in the right headspace for it.

Conclusion

Night Road is an emotional journey through grief and forgiveness with wide appeal. While it’s nothing special when compared to her other works, if you’re in the mood for this type of story, Night Road is a great read.


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