Afbeelding auteur

Amber McRee Turner

Auteur van Sway

4 Werken 155 Leden 7 Besprekingen

Werken van Amber McRee Turner

Sway (2012) 95 exemplaren
Circa Now (2014) 58 exemplaren
Circa Now 1 exemplaar
Sway 1 exemplaar

Tagged

Algemene kennis

Geslacht
female

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Besprekingen

Things I liked about this book:

1. CAN IT! When Cass's cousin's family argues, they literally write down their complaints and put them in cans.
2. Shut up dot com. Do vegetarians have to speak Fig Latin instead of Pig Latin? And all the other wacky stuff Cass's cousin Syd says.
3. The idea that Sway is both magical and realistic.
4. The rhymey punniness of the language.
5. Cass's dad, who just wants his daughter to like him.

Things I did not so much like about this book:

1. The rhymey punniness was a bit much at times for me as an adult reader. Mostly I love that kind of stuff, but it could've been toned down in parts.
2. Cass's mom. What a jerkface.
3. It was too long for me. The concept of Sway, which is the book's selling point, didn't get introduced until page 148.

Books this book reminded me of:

1. Take the W, split it apart, move it to the other side of the A, and what have you got? [b:SAVVY|2133795|Savvy|Ingrid Law|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1287187612s/2133795.jpg|2596626]. Both books play with language. Both have a touch of magic in a realistic setting. (Okay, SAVVY has more than a touch.) Both have a weird road trip.
… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
LibrarianDest | 2 andere besprekingen | Jan 3, 2024 |
Sweet story of father-daughter bonding and healing. When Cass's mom decides to leave, Cass's father comes up with the crazy idea of spending the summer in The Roast. Cass simply can not imagine how life could get worse.
 
Gemarkeerd
MrsBond | 2 andere besprekingen | Jun 27, 2023 |
This review is also available on my blog, Read Till Dawn.

This book was not at all what I expected it to be. It was much, much more than that. I thought it would be a pretty frilly book about a girl who misses her father after he dies, but then realizes that this boy who shows up on her doorstep is really her father reincarnated (sort of like Fluke, but the father becomes a boy instead of a dog), and they all live happily ever after because their family is reunited again.

This is not what happened. And I'm not spoiling anything, just correcting a misconception that you'd probably get from the teaser, because Circa Now never pretends to be a book about reincarnation. Circa and her mother aren't just there as placeholders to mourn for Circa's father; they are real, complex humans who are dealing with their own issues. Circa's mother in particular is nothing like I expected her to be - she is actually a recluse struggling with depression, who never goes anywhere except her home, her studio (where she's a professional picture-taker), and her church five blocks down the road. Circa's father always helped her through the rough spots, cushioning whatever he could for her, but now he's gone and Mrs. Monroe has to fend for herself in the big, bad world. When Miles shows up on her doorstep, her strength is tested even more as she has to take care of him (including taking him to the police, the doctor, etc).

Circa is still in deep mourning for her father, and she struggles to deal with her feelings as she must also try to fill his role in helping her mother cope with the world. She wants to finish her father's big project, which is a wall of pictures from her hometowns history. It was supposed to be a huge community service project, as well as a labor of love for the elderly citizens of the Alzheimer's facility in which the pictures are going to be placed. Circa is desperate to complete the job both in honor of her father and because she wants to help the patients at the facility rediscover their pasts. Her method of coping with her father's death is to try and "step up to bat," picking up all of the pieces she can (while also straining to believe that he somehow hasn't left her for good).

There's some conflict between Circa and her mother, because they have a very hard time understanding each other. Their methods of coping are often opposite, and cause them to butt heads as Circa is determined to finish her father's project, but her mother is just as determined to keep Circa from doing it because she doesn't want Circa to feel like she has to fill her father's place. This conflict felt very real, and added another dimension to the story.

My favorite dimension, though, was the one with Miles. From the minute he walked onto the page I knew that he was going to be a very interesting character. No matter where his amnesia came from, it made him very fascinating - and turned him into a very tortured, lonely boy. I was rooting for a happy ending from the very beginning, because I couldn't help but feel that he (along with all of the other main characters) desperately needed one.

I enjoyed Circa Now, but it wasn't my all-time favorite book. Because it's MG it didn't dive as far into the concepts as it could have, which was frustrating at times. It could have taken things to such wonderful depth! Circa Now still raises some fascinating points about the meaning of life, family, and happiness, though, and I'm glad I read it. If it interests you, then definitely give it a try!
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Gemarkeerd
Jaina_Rose | 3 andere besprekingen | Mar 1, 2016 |
this book is filled with imagination and colorful characters.
there are some sad parts and the story centers around how the main character Circa deals with them.

I found it a little slow moving at times, but my interest in how it all would unfold kept me reading to the end.
 
Gemarkeerd
katsmiao | 3 andere besprekingen | Oct 23, 2015 |

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Statistieken

Werken
4
Leden
155
Populariteit
#135,097
Waardering
3.9
Besprekingen
7
ISBNs
9

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