Events

2014 EVENTS:
Holly Bourne, Non Pratt and James Dawson - 30th October
Becca Fitzpatrick - 15th November
Showing posts with label mental illness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mental illness. Show all posts

Friday, 4 April 2014

REVIEW: Charm and Strange - Stephanie Kuehn

Friday, 4 April 2014

GENRE: Contemporary/Issues
PAGES: 272
PUBLISHER: Electric Monkey
FORMAT: PB
BUY IT: Waterstones
RATING: 5 Stars


This book refers to an uncorrected advanced edition.


SUMMARY

No one really knows who Andrew Winston Winters is. Least of all himself. He is part Win, a lonely teenager exiled to a remote boarding school in the wake of a family tragedy. The guy who shuts the whole world out, no matter the cost, because his darkest fear is of himself ...of the wolfish predator within. But he's also part Drew, the angry boy with violent impulses that control him. The boy who, one fateful summer, was part of something so terrible it came close to destroying him. A deftly woven, elegant, unnerving psychological thriller about a boy at war with himself. Charm and Strange is a masterful exploration of one of the greatest taboos.


REVIEW

Oh God. How do I even begin to describe something that I adore so much without giving away the truth of it? Charm and Strange is an incredible, powerful book that is just so compelling I was almost breathless when I finished it. It has a calm, sad feel and the world around me disappeared and I sank into the narrative.

Perhaps I should start by saying how I came to read this book.

A proof of this had been sitting on the shelf at work. No cover really, just blank and black with the title. I'm terrible when books don't have a cover, I almost like to prejudge a book and be proved wrong. I read the blurb and thought it sounded quirky and interesting. My initial thought was that it was a werewolf book, and certainly people on Goodreads have listed it as a paranormal book. Reflectively this really annoys me because they have either formally categorised it without reading it, or they have read it and didn't pay enough attention. However, I noticed it on display at work and chatted to a colleague about it, and became determined to give it a go. 

I genuinely don't want to give anything away about it and that makes it so difficult to review. It's so important to go into this blind to experience the full impact of it. It's like nothing I've ever read before. Charm and Strange is a narrative that unveils a boy's fragmented mental psyche and also the story behind it. It teases out facts through Win's interpretation of events and I was so desperate to know what had happened, what he had done or what had happened to him, that made him become quite so withdrawn. I had no idea, though. I wasn't prepared. There were so many hints and clues as to what had happened but when I finally realised it was like being punched in the chest. It's strange that something so devastating can also be compelling to read, but's its so interesting to read about the development of personality through trauma. I find the brains ability to cope, adapt and change to help us try to cope with situations infinitely interesting.

As a bookseller, it's a tough one for me. I'd be reluctant to recommend this to anyone too young because I think it could be a little frightening, and some of the things Win does can be quite funny if you don't understand the sadness behind it. I'm talking 17/18+. There are still elements of hope and Win is incredibly strong considering how much her has had to deal with on his own. Adults should find a lot to get to grips with, though. It's allegory is so clever (yet heartbreaking) that perhaps it needs a reader with a little more life experience to understand it in a way it deserves. 

Part of me doesn't want to tell people about this book. You know that feeling when you like an underground band that you think is amazing and then everyone loves them and it changes the way you feel about it? I never what that to happen. I know thats how a lot of John Green's long-term fans feel. I don't want someone to turn round and go, 'I don't get it'. Then I'd have to roll my eyes at them, call them a moron and not associate with them any longer. And that's a lot of effort. 

I suppose what I'm saying is read Charm and Strange if you're not a moron, if you're ready for a challenge, and if you're ready to have your heart broken. I'm in awe of it.
"The story that was too big for me to tell, the one that grew to fill the depths of my being and the far corners of my mind. It’s how I lost my system of meaning… but I haven’t lost everything."

- Bex. 

Monday, 31 March 2014

REVIEW: Entangled - Cat Clarke

Monday, 31 March 2014
PAGES: 256

PUBLISHER: Quercus
FORMAT: Paperback
BUY IT: Waterstones
RATING: 4 Stars



SUMMARY

The same questions whirl round and round in my head: What does he want from me? How could I have let this happen? AM I GOING TO DIE? 17-year-old Grace wakes up in a white room, with table, pens and paper - and no clue how she got there. As Grace pours her tangled life onto the page, she is forced to remember everything she's tried to forget. There's falling hopelessly in love with the gorgeous Nat, and the unravelling of her relationship with her best friend Sal. But there's something missing. As hard as she's trying to remember, is there something she just can't see? Grace must face the most important question of all. Why is she here? A story of dangerous secrets, intense friendships and electrifying attraction.


REVIEW

Summing this book up without giving too much away is actually pretty difficult. As the blurb says, the book starts with Grace waking up in a completely white room with nothing to do but write with the pens and paper that have been provided for her. She is looked after and watched over by Ethan, who's only real part in the narrative is to spur Grace on to continue her story, which switches between her time in the room and the events leading up to it. There are two other main characters, Sal - her best friend, and Nat, who becomes her boyfriend. It's also a story of how easy it is to become 'entangled' in other people's lives, sometimes without even realising.

I really didn't want to like this book. When I started reading it I hated Grace, she was the kind of girl that I would have avoided like the plague at school - she's an underage drinker who sleeps with anything that moves. But thinking back, that isn't fair to her. I found myself finding things that I liked about her, she's fiercely loyal to her best friend Sal, and she uses falling in love as a reason to start her life over. And I think this is what makes me like the book so much - I took her to heart, and actually wanted to protect her from herself. I can hear you all saying 'she's just a character!' but you can see her downfall coming before she does, and it's heartbreaking. To the point where I was going to cry whilst reading the end on the train.

What this book does essentially is examine the fragility of the teenage mind, how complicated we are as people, and even vaguely touches on the nature/nurture debate through Grace's polar opposite best friend, Sal. For the whole novel you can feel that there's something wrong, that there's things missing, and the fact that you can see things that Grace misses, even though it's from her point of view (which actually is one of the features that really makes the story what it is) makes it all the more sad.


CHARACTERS

Grace: Grace really is quite a complex character. She can be brash and forthright, but she's also really sensitive. She deals with a problem that a lot of teens go through (namely self harm) and actually the first person narrative really gives you the best insight as to how she develops from when she is 14 to 17 where the novel starts, where she tries to kill herself.

Sal: I really think Sal is in this novel to highlight everything Grace isn't. She's quiet and has little self confidence. I did like that she forgives Grace, on numerous occasions, and it rather reminded me of my relationship with my best friend.

Nat: I have really mixed feelings about Nat. In parts he says everything that an amazing boyfriend should, he knows how to make girls feel like they're the only one in the world, and let's face it, it's those ones you have to watch out for.

Finally, I think that there is something in here that everyone will associate with. It's the first book in a long time that I've read that hasn't been paranormal, and it really does make me want to read more simple contemporary fiction. I really hope that there won't be a sequel to this, because it's a perfect form the way it is.

- Bex.
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