This novel alternates "Now" and "Then" sections. In "Then," teenage Cass bicycles across America with her best friend's ashes. In "Now," she has returned from her trip and is facing everything she tried to flee via road trip: high school, her friend's death, and the bully who called her a dyke in front of the entire school and now has inexplicably been given the starring role in Cass's he dead best friend's musical, Totally Sweet Ninja Death Squad.

A sweet, poignant high school lesbian romance and coming-of-age story which also partakes of one of my least-favorite YA genres (my dead best friend) and one of my most-favorite (backstage drama). The former is well-done and non-moralistic; the latter is totally sweet. (Especially the excerpted song lyrics.) The whole is more than the sum of its parts, and the climax to the "Then" section, in particular, was beautifully orchestrated and moving.

One of my favorite things about the whole book is that Cass, the heroine, is a Quaker, which affects her worldview in interesting, believable ways. I also liked that her parents are supportive and she doesn't rebel against them and her culture just because she's a teenager in a YA novel.

The main flaw was that many of the supporting characters were thin. While I believed in her theatre pals as a group, as individuals, there was not much to them. For instance, all we ever learn about Lissa is her ethnicity, that she's quiet, and that she's a vegetarian. Also, some of the dialogue would have been unusually self-aware and emotionally sophisticated coming from twenty-somethings, let alone supposedly socially awkward teenagers.

Overall, however, I liked this a lot. I leave you with these main selling points: 1. Teen lesbians. 2. Totally Sweet Ninja Death Squad: The Musical.

A Love Story Starring My Dead Best Friend (Only $6.80 on Amazon.)
oyceter: teruterubouzu default icon (Default)

From: [personal profile] oyceter


Totally Sweet Ninja Death Squad

BEST.
kore: (Default)

From: [personal profile] kore


Wow, a Quaker heroine? That's neat.

From: [personal profile] indywind


Have you read Will Grayson, Will Grayson by John Green & David Levithan? It's YA, LGBTQ (but not in a typical Addressing a Social Issue sort of way), with a smidge of backstage drama ("Hold Me Closer Tiny Dancer: The Tiny Cooper Story, A Musical" produced, directed, and starring the pivotal secondary character described as "the world’s largest person who is really, really gay, and also the world’s gayest person who is really, really large.")
owlectomy: A girl is moving the lever from "third person" to "first person" on a novel writing machine. (firstperson)

From: [personal profile] owlectomy


I found it so simultaneously hilarious and annoying that this book came out the month before my book (the aforementioned Love Story did. I liked it quite a lot, coincidences nonwithstanding, and the depiction of depression is very convincing.
larryhammer: floral print origami penguin, facing left (Default)

From: [personal profile] larryhammer


Actually, teen Quaker with worldview that fits identity is TOTALLY a selling point here. Possibly edging out the musical.

---L.

From: [identity profile] tool-of-satan.livejournal.com


I enjoyed this quite a bit. I do agree with:

The main flaw was that many of the supporting characters were thin. While I believed in her theatre pals as a group, as individuals, there was not much to them. For instance, all we ever learn about Lissa is her ethnicity, that she's quiet, and that she's a vegetarian. Also, some of the dialogue would have been unusually self-aware and emotionally sophisticated coming from twenty-somethings, let alone supposedly socially awkward teenagers.

I hate to say that a book should be longer, since there are so many books out there that could stand to be shorter, but I think that another 50 pages or so might have improved this book - that would have allowed for more characterization for the other characters and made the development of the relationship a bit slower, which I think would have improved the emotional payoff. And there could have been more lyrics.

The dialogue didn't bother me as much because I just like good dialogue. :)

But overall, it was good. I gather the author is working on or has completed a fantasy novel.

From: [identity profile] rachelmanija.livejournal.com


I agree. Many books should have been shorter, but this one should have been longer. I'm sure any extra length would have been good and not padded. And yes! More ninja lyrics!

I didn't realize that her next was fantasy. Interesting!
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