Showing posts with label jandy nelson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label jandy nelson. Show all posts

Thursday, December 10, 2015

Book Review: I'll Give You the Sun by Jandy Nelson

I'll Give You the Sun by Jandy Nelson
(Goodreads)
Jude and her twin brother, Noah, are incredibly close. At thirteen, isolated Noah draws constantly and is falling in love with the charismatic boy next door, while daredevil Jude cliff-dives and wears red-red lipstick and does the talking for both of them.  
But three years later, Jude and Noah are barely speaking. Something has happened to wreck the twins in different and dramatic ways . . . until Jude meets a cocky, broken, beautiful boy, as well as someone else—an even more unpredictable new force in her life.  
The early years are Noah's story to tell. The later years are Jude's. What the twins don't realize is that they each have only half the story, and if they could just find their way back to one another, they’d have a chance to remake their world.
Sometimes it's hard to gather my thoughts when I feel like I've been thrown into a hurricane, spun around a couple thousand times, and spat out in the span of three seconds. That's more or less the equivalent of reading this ~400 page book in three days.

I seem to be on a roll reading books that alternate chapters between either characters or time periods (Beside Myself, Finding Amelia, Hide). I'll Give You the Sun actually gave me both! Noah tells the past and Jude tells the present and in every chapter you find out a little bit of what happens in between. One thing that I loved and hated at the same time was how long each chapter was. I could feel myself getting so immersed into the story when the chapter would end at what seemed like the best part. I definitely had a lot of urges to skip the next chapter (mostly Jude's) so I could peek at what was next.

Jude and Noah are some of the best siblings I've read in a while. And it's not because they're perfect, or anywhere near that at all. Jude and Noah show the ugly side of sibling jealousy; the backstabbing, the lies, the ugly tendencies you can't hide. Their luggage of flaws definitely made them feel real and relatable.

Noah, without a doubt, made me feel like I was in high school, falling in love for the first time. Jandy Nelson did an amazing job at capturing those fluttering feelings that honestly, made my heart skip a couple of beats. His unique way of seeing the world definitely captured the mind of a young artist who can't stop thinking about what to create next.

Jude took a while to grow on me. Like Noah, she's artistic but in a non-obvious way. And to be quite honest, she's a bit of a mess when we first meet her. It was hard to not to groan at how much of a teenager she was being and it isn't until later that I could really understand why she was being like that. However, it's incredibly beautiful to see her unique way of coping with her circumstances (spoiler alert: her mother's death).

Without a doubt, I'd read this book again (and I'm looking forward to the film adaptation, can they please get Antonio Banderas to play G?). There's nothing extraordinary that happens, but the writing magnifies it in a way that makes you feel like you're reading something remarkable.
Memorable Quotes 
Noah
"It's like being kissed by a feather, no, smoother, a petal. Too soft. We're petal people. I think about the earthquake kiss in the alcove and want to cry again. This time because I am sad. And scared. And because my skin has never fit this badly before." (134) 
Jude
"I kept thinking, it's okay, I can handle this. I can. It's okay, okay, okay. But it wasn't and I couldn't. I didn't know you could get buried in your own silence." (47)

Friday, April 24, 2015

Review: The Sky is Everywhere by Jandy Nelson


The Sky is Everywhere by Jandy Nelson

(Goodreads)
Seventeen-year-old Lennie Walker, bookworm and band geek, plays second clarinet and spends her time tucked safely and happily in the shadow of her fiery sister Bailey. But when Bailey dies suddenly, Lennie is catapulted to center stage of her own life—and, despite her nonexistent history with boys, finds herself struggling to balance two. Toby was Bailey’s boyfriend; his grief mirrors Lennie’s own. Joe is the new boy in town, a transplant from Paris whose nearly magical grin is matched only by his musical talent. For Lennie, they’re the sun and the moon; one boy takes her out of her sorrow, the other comforts her in it. But just like their celestial counterparts, they can’t collide without the whole wide world exploding.

Alright. This is my first book review so I may or may not know exactly what I'm doing. I haven't read a book for pleasure since I graduated from school last year and I'm not exactly sure what made me pick this one out of the piles of books that my friend has in overflowing cardboard boxes.

I've been blessed so far in my life in that I don't know what it's like to lose someone so close to me like Bailey was to her sister, Lennie. However, being close to someone who has lost a sibling made it feel like I was gaining a the smallest of insights to that gigantic life changing event.

So. Lennie. The main character of the book, seventeen years old and quite an accurate portrayal of the average teenager. In the first 50 or so pages, I couldn't really tell what kind of person she was. Everything happened so fast. A plant that reflects her state of health, going back to school, meeting this new guy, notes scattered throughout her hometown. It was a bit disorientating but now I can appreciate how I was thrown into the middle of this person's life without having her entire life explained to me in the first five pages.

What I enjoyed most about the book was the way each chapter began with the image of Lennie's notes and poems. I do wish they had looked more realistic rather than it being a font in front of an image of different kinds of paper.

I have to praise Nelson for Lennie's voice. I do feel like I am in her head and I can really feel her thoughts growing as the pain of mourning doesn't necessarily get easier, but becomes a part of her daily life. Many scenes in this novel reminded me of Me, Earl, and the Dying Girl (the film version, which I was able to catch at the LA Times Book Festival last weekend) in which Lennie learns things about her sister after her death. It's haunting to think that you can find out so much about a person through the things they leave behind.

While I wasn't a huge fan of the two boys in Lennie's life, I slowly came to an understanding that...to put it quite frankly, shit happens. Life happens even when you want to press pause and you have to learn to go with it or you'll be left behind in your past.

So...that's my first book review! I don't know how I did, I wanted to say more but I'm afraid of saying too much.