Two fantastic novels

I almost put YA novels because that’s the library section I found them in except these books would be good for anyone in high school and adults; they both deserve a much wider audience.

The Miseducation of Cameron Post; a novel 
(2012)

“The afternoon my parents died, I was out shoplifting with Irene Klausen” is just how this novel begins.  Cameron Post is a very unique character; she’s 12, she shoplifts, thinks about girls, and has the wide open space of Miles City, Montana to explore.  Her life doesn’t change much after her parents die in a car accident.  She hangs out with Irene and practices for swim meets except now she spends a lot of time in her room watching VHS movies on a television she moved from her parent’s bedroom.  You get the sense she misses her parents and she does meet with a school counselor yet she doesn’t spend much time grieving.  She doesn’t realize until later all that she’s lost.
Her mother’s sister, Ruth, leaves her home in Florida to move in with Cameron.  Her grandmother continues to stay with her so Cameron is in the same house/town/school she is familiar with and life keeps spinning along.  While she’s had a few small romances along the way it isn’t until Cameron runs into Coley Taylor at church that that life turns upside down for her.
I want all of you to read the book fresh so I’m not going to say more other than Ms. Danforth has created such an easily read (470 pgs worth) story that you just have to keep reading more and more until you come to the last page and then you still want more.  Her characters are so fully developed that even the bad characters have redeeming qualities.  Two sidekicks of Cameron’s, Jamie and Adam, were favorites of mine.  This story will stay with you for a long time with its fine writing;  marvelous wit and brutal honest look at how we try to mold people into what they are not.
A quote:
“She reached around the locker door and grabbed my arm all dramatic-like.  “I’ll call Ruth.  I’ll do it.  I’ll call her and tell her you’ve being all weirdo loner again and won’t come to prom and you know she won’t let off you.  She’ll have all sorts of ideas about eligible bachelors.”

“You’re a terrible person and I hate you.”

“So who do you want me to ask?”…(131)


When you were here
2013

This one, also about an orphaned child, is very well-written and has a unique look at teenagers as humans; young adults who make mistakes but that can move on and learn.  There is drug use and sex along with death and dying.  
Danny’s mother has just died after a five year struggle with cancer.  His father died six years ago in an accident which means Danny is now alone.  He’s valedictorian of his class and the only people with him at his graduation ceremony are Kate, his mom’s best friend and Kate’s daughter, Holland. He feels adrift until he receives a letter from one of his mom’s friends in Tokyo. His mom was undergoing a unique treatment in Japan and Danny feels drawn to understand more about her though-process.    Suddenly he has a purpose; he will go to Tokyo, meet this friend, and spend time trying to understand more about his mom through the last places she visited before she died.  Danny’s relationship with his mom as well as Holland’s relationship with her mom both attest to the idea that kids can screw up and still maintain positive relationships with their parents.  The only drawback to this book is that most teens do not have the kind of money that Danny is given.  It works and it is well-explained but enviable.

A quote:

I press.  “How was she taking care of my mom if she died?” I am sick of beating around the bush. I want to know what all these legends, all this tea and happiness and healing cures, are supposed to mean.  “In case you didn’t know, she died.  Okay? There was no cure.  The tea didn’t work.  Turns out it’s not mystical after all.  She’s gone.  Done.  sayonara.  The jig is up.”  My voice is caustic, the words corrosive, but inside I just want so badly to know all the things my mom never told me.  (111)

I checked both of these out from my local library.  




A Secret Kept by Tatiana De Rosnay

(2010)
St. Martin’s Press

I read Sarah’s Key a few years back and liked it.  It had an interesting mystery to it and the back story was historical fiction which was great for me, a lover of historical fiction.  I didn’t enjoy the modern story as much I liked the Holocaust and the same goes for A Secret Kept, De Rosnay’s second book.

Synopsis:

“It all began with a simple seaside vacation, a brother and sister recapturing their childhood.  Antoine Rey though he had the perfect surprise for his sister Melanie’s birthday: a weekend by the sea at Noirmoutier Island, where the pair spent many happy childhood summers playing on the beach.  It had been too long, Antoine thought, since they’d returned to the island-more than 30 years since their mother died and the family holidays ceased.  But the island’s haunting beauty triggers more than happy memories; it reminds Melanie of something unexpected and deeply disturbing about their last island summer.  When, on the drive home to Paris, she finally summons the courage to reveal what she knows to Antoine, her emotions overcome her and she loses control of the car.”  (jacket flap)

When I read the flap at the library the intrigue over what scandalous thing would make someone lose control of the car piqued my interest.  The Parisian setting, the analysis of Antoine and Astrid’s marriage, the teenage strife, Antoine’s girlfriend, Angele, the back story of June and Clarisse, and the Rey’s family all add to what could be an interesting and uniquely done story.

It doesn’t work though.  Antoine is filled with such painful agony over his recent divorce and his relationship with his children.  His sister Melanie who worked in publishing before the accident seemed like an unique character but turns out to disappoint.  I found very little redeeming qualities for this family both past and present.  I’m not going to spill the story of what exactly happened with Antoine and Melanie’s mother but it sadly goes no where.  I wanted some kind of resolution.  Perhaps Antoine should have had a conversation about his mother with his father to fully understand and maybe through that conversation some family healing for both men could have occurred.  This would have tied things together for Antoine to move forward with his future life, having connected with his father about their happier days.

More than the story’s elements it was De Rosnay’s writing style that made me cringe.  It was stilted, repetitive, and overly dramatic.  Instead of telling a simple story she gives us complex with too much blah-blah.  She tells us so many times that Antoine and his father haven’t gotten along since their mother’s death that I felt De Rosnay must think her audience dense.

“Melanie has opened her eyes.  Our father grabs her hand, hanging on to it for dear life, as if this were the last time he will ever touch her.  He leans toward her, half of his body on the bed.  The way he clasps her hand moves me.  He is realizing he has nearly lost his daughter.  His petitie Melabelle.  Her nickname from long ago. He wipes his eyes with the cotton handkerchief he always keeps in his pocket.  He cannot say a word, it seems.  He can only sit there and breathe audibly.Melanie is disturbed by this display of emotion.  She doesn’t want to see his ravaged, wet face.  So she looks at me.  For so many years now, our father hasn’t ever shown his feelings, only displeasure or anger.  This is an unexpected flashback to the tender, caring father he used to be, before our mother died.” (79)

As a budding book blogger “psychologist” I would say their father has been angry for so long because his first wife, their mother, the love of his life died tragically!  And they never talk about it, never attempting to heal themselves or their father.  Everything De Rosnay tells us is that the he was an adoring father and husband but yet Antoine stays angry with him throughout, never discussing any of his new knowledge.  And Melanie completely shuts down and tells Antoine she doesn’t want to know anything more, tucking her head in the sand, choosing to live in limbo about her family instead of knowing at least some of the truth.

Read more:

The Garfield Review

Another point-of-view at

Brain Candy Book Reviews.

*just a quirky note-did anybody else notice that both De Rosnay books have similar titles (Sarah’s Key, A Secret Kept) both S,K* Odd to me or just odd I don’t know.  You be the judge.