Status
Available
Call number
Genres
Collection
Publication
Simon Pulse (2018), Edition: Reprint, 416 pages
Description
Best friends Caddy and Rosie have always been close, but as Caddy turns sixteen, she longs to be more confident and interesting like Rosie and turns to Suzanne, an exciting new friend who has a mysterious past.
User reviews
LibraryThing member Jonez
3.0
It is refreshing reading a young adult novel that doesn't focus on or needs to contain a romantic relationship. This book was a deep exploration of friendships old and new, and not only the difficulties of navigating and maintaining a friendship triad but the insecurities that come along with
The complexities of the friendship and friend experience is made that more difficult as one of these friends is struggling with her mental health as a result of some fairly traumatizing experiences. As someone with a Masters Degree in Psych, I will always gravitate towards these types of deep character studies that have a focus on mental illness. Mostly because I like to see how they are handled. While I think the author did a brilliant job fleshing out the main character Caddy there was something done in this book that I am generally not a fan of. That is when the mentally ill character (in this case Suzanne) is characterized so heavily by her mental illness that they become nothing but the illness. I have known and been friends with a Suzanne or two in my lifetime, and while those characters sometimes walk the line between being both exhilarating to be around and exhausting (which Barnard does a great job of showing), they are also more than just the highs and often extremely aggressive lows that the character Suzanne was often reduced to in this novel. For that reason, this book fell a wee bit flat for me.
It is refreshing reading a young adult novel that doesn't focus on or needs to contain a romantic relationship. This book was a deep exploration of friendships old and new, and not only the difficulties of navigating and maintaining a friendship triad but the insecurities that come along with
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that. The book is slowly paced, but I think that was necessary in order to develop to flesh out the characters, the frienship. and the dynamic of the characters relationships. For the most part, Barnard does a great job in authoring this exploration. The complexities of the friendship and friend experience is made that more difficult as one of these friends is struggling with her mental health as a result of some fairly traumatizing experiences. As someone with a Masters Degree in Psych, I will always gravitate towards these types of deep character studies that have a focus on mental illness. Mostly because I like to see how they are handled. While I think the author did a brilliant job fleshing out the main character Caddy there was something done in this book that I am generally not a fan of. That is when the mentally ill character (in this case Suzanne) is characterized so heavily by her mental illness that they become nothing but the illness. I have known and been friends with a Suzanne or two in my lifetime, and while those characters sometimes walk the line between being both exhilarating to be around and exhausting (which Barnard does a great job of showing), they are also more than just the highs and often extremely aggressive lows that the character Suzanne was often reduced to in this novel. For that reason, this book fell a wee bit flat for me.
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Awards
Language
Original language
English
Physical description
416 p.; 5.5 inches
ISBN
9781481486118
Similar in this library
DDC/MDS
823.92 |