This series took me to places I didn't know I needed or wanted to go. I feel like I just processed so much, and I understand a lot more about people and the world.
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Nick reviewed Tender Is the Flesh by Agustina Bazterrica
Review of 'Tender Is the Flesh' on 'Goodreads'
5 stars
Wow. This book really shook me and I have a lot of thoughts about it. Too many to post on Goodreads, so check out my full review on my blog. (Warning for spoilers)
Nick reviewed Robot futures by Illah Reza Nourbakhsh
Review of 'Robot futures' on 'Goodreads'
4 stars
This guy has such a pessimistic outlook! We could use robots for so many other things to improve society instead of letting it control us.
But otherwise I enjoyed this exploration of how robots may affect us based on current trends in technology.
Nick reviewed Cemetery Boys by Aiden Thomas
Review of 'Cemetery Boys' on 'Goodreads'
5 stars
I don’t usually read YA, but when I saw this was an East LA urban fantasy starring a gay, witchy trans boy, I immediately said, “Oh, hell yes.”
And the story did not disappoint. It tackled many complex topics with heart and humor, and had me either tearing up or laughing out loud. It was full of loud, vivid characters (like my favorite Maritza, or handsome Rio). It brings the reader deeply into the sights, smells, and sounds of East LA, with its varying descriptions of food, music, fashion, and style.
Full review on my blog HERE.
Nick reviewed Apparitions by Marissa van Uden
Review of 'Apparitions' on 'Goodreads'
5 stars
Apparitions tells the story of two deaf boys who desperately hold onto each other for support in a world not built for them, where only they can truly understand each other. It's also a story of how having so much love trapped inside you while being misunderstood can make you turn out one way, or the other. . .
This is told entirely from the deaf perspective, so if you're one of those readers who can't stand books without quotation marks, give this one a pass—or, understand that there are none because there is no spoken dialogue to be heard from this point of view. This stylistic choice, to me, was skillfully done.
I also loved the tight control of revealing information. This book was a brilliantly crafted epistolary narrative, told in part through the transcribed signs of the narrator whose name only exists in sign, and through the various …
Apparitions tells the story of two deaf boys who desperately hold onto each other for support in a world not built for them, where only they can truly understand each other. It's also a story of how having so much love trapped inside you while being misunderstood can make you turn out one way, or the other. . .
This is told entirely from the deaf perspective, so if you're one of those readers who can't stand books without quotation marks, give this one a pass—or, understand that there are none because there is no spoken dialogue to be heard from this point of view. This stylistic choice, to me, was skillfully done.
I also loved the tight control of revealing information. This book was a brilliantly crafted epistolary narrative, told in part through the transcribed signs of the narrator whose name only exists in sign, and through the various collected writings, ravings, and files related to Felix Jimson, the other deaf boy.
The narrator was kidnapped from his mother by his father, and held captive in a basement room until he escaped as a teenager, only to end up in a mental hospital. Felix also is estranged from his mother, but his left him and his dad of her own volition. Both boys have daddy issues, but one wishes love and peace for his father, hoping he'll stop being so mean and xenophobic, while the other becomes obsessed with killing his father.
The relationship between these two boys is conflicting due to the power dynamic. Stuck in a Canadian mental hospital in the year 1980, the narrator learns how to sign from fellow patient Felix, and even eventually gets his name from him. Felix gives him the gift of language, gives him the words for love, peace, sex, and everything else, including some free tips on what to know to get by as a Deaf person in a hearing world. His observations on the world are often insightful and true, to a degree. However, Felix is in the hospital for a reason himself: he's a paranoid schizophrenic who takes this opportunity to explain his understanding of God to a willing listener, warping the narrator into being a devoted apostle of his new gospel.
And this is where the conflict arises. Because it is ultimately love and the desire for true connection that drives the actions of these boys, whether they be violent or not. But because of Felix's mental illness, the way he goes about trying to receive and maintain love, both on small and large scales, is psychologically manipulative. The narrator's ignorance and innocence prevent him from seeing this, though we, the reader, and the doctors in the novel, are all too aware of what's going on. It makes scenes where they are forcibly dragged apart even harder to read. It's hard not to root for these boys and hope they can stay together, even knowing Felix is so messed up and needs help that the system just won't be able to provide. It's understandably hard for the narrator to feel any need to walk away from the person who gave him the gift of language and was the first person to really show him love after a childhood of hate and violence.
Overall, a truly horrific novel that expertly portrays the intersections of disability, sexual orientation, and mental health, Apparitions was a reading experience unlike any other I've had so far.
Thanks to BookSirens and Dark Hart Books for providing me with a free digital copy of this book. I am leaving my honest feedback here voluntarily.