June 14 2021

Radio Silence, by Alice Oseman

Radio Silence

Radio Silence, by Alice Oseman

Title: Radio Silence
Author: Alice Oseman
Genre/ issues: Contemporary fiction. Queer fiction. Family/ relationships.

Shop local where you can: For Australian readers, you can find this book on Booktopia, or support your local independent bookstore. US readers, check out Bookshop.org.

It somehow seems appropriate to share this book with the Curtin University English building in the background. Radio Silence by Alice Oseman tells the story of study machine Frances, whose entire life is aimed at getting into Cambridge. Then she meets Aled, her neighbour from across the street, and for the first time she feels comfortable being herself. But then, the trust between them is broken, and Frances finds herself caught between who she thought she was, and who she could be, and sets out to help her friend – and hopefully, herself too.
This is a slow, gentle book, filled with fragile characters finding their way in a world that tells them that academic success is the only important one. I love the way that parental, personal and school expectations and assumptions about excellence and opportunity are gently probed and critiqued, and I love the gentle strength that Frances shows as she comes to realise that there is another way to be happy. The Welcome to Nightvale references made me happy in my heart, and reminded me that I need to catch up on it. More than anything else, though, I loved Oseman’s signature depictions of gender and sexuality, both through their authentic representations on the page, and through characters’ engagement with and examination of their own sexual identity. A really wonderful read.

#TamaraReads #2021readingchallenge 79/2021

Happy reading,

Tamara

 

 

June 13 2021

Perfect on Paper, by Sophie Gonzales

Perfect on Paper

Perfect on Paper, by Sophie Gonzales

Title: Perfect on Paper
Author: Sophie Gonzales
Genre/ issues: YA. Romance. Queer fiction.

Shop local where you can: For Australian readers, you can find this book on Booktopia, or support your local independent bookstore. US readers, check out Bookshop.org.

Perfect on Paper by Sophie Gonzales is a delightful YA queer rom-com. Darcy runs a relationship advice service out of an unused locker at her school. She’s protective of the anonymity, and proud of her success rate, promising refunds if it proves to be bad advice. All goes well until Braugham, the new kid from Australia, uncovers her secret, and she’s forced to help him win his ex-girlfriend back to stop her best friend and equally secret crush finding out.
This is a well-written and engaging novel full of heart. I loved the queer representation – Darcy’s sister is trans and was responsible for establishing the Queer and Questioning Club at the school that many of the characters are apart of, and the plot deals with openness and sensitivity about the importance of honest communication and enthusiastic consent in relationships. I especially appreciated the focus on biphobia, both in the queer community and internalised, and the impact of this on bi people. A wonderful weekend read!

#TamaraReads #2021readingchallenge 78/2021

Happy reading,

Tamara

 

 

June 12 2021

We Dream of Space, by Erin Entrada Kelly

We dream of space

We Dream of Space, by Erin Entrada Kelly

Title: We Dream of Space
Author: Erin Entrada Kelly
Genre/ issues: Middle grade. Historical fiction. Family/ relationships.

Shop local where you can: For Australian readers, you can find this book on Booktopia, or support your local independent bookstore. US readers, check out Bookshop.org.

What a gem of a book. We Dream of Space hit me in all the 12-year-old-Tamara feels, from the focus on the Challenger shuttle disaster to the obsessions with Star Wars, from the sense that you don’t quite belong to the feeling of being not quite “enough” at anything. And then the suckerpunch for 46-year-old-Tamara? The fact that this book, so intensely familiar to me with its 1986 setting, is labelled “historical fiction”. Ouch.
The main action of this book covers the month of January 1986, and Bird and her brother’s social science teacher is counting down. She’d applied for the Teacher in Space program, a spot that eventually went to Christa McAauliffe, who I wanted to be, and whose motto about her life is one I’ve used to guide my career. Bird is obsessed with space, and equally obsessed with machines – she pulls apart anything vaguely mechanical she can get her hands on and draws her own “birds eye view” schematics of how they work, in an effort to make sense of her world. Her twin brother Fitch spends every moment possible playing Major Havoc at the arcade, and wrestles with an explosive temper he doesn’t understand. And their older brother Cash is in the same grade as them after failing the previous year, loves basketball but isn’t good enough, and feels like a failure at everything. They share a house with their parents who constantly fight, but they all exist in their own orbits, with their own dreams of of hope, belonging, friendship, family and space.
This is a truly special read, and even though I knew it was going to break my heart to revisit January 28, 1986, I felt so cherished and supported along with these wonderful characters through Kelly’s beautifully sensitive and compassionate writing that I was happy to go on that journey again. This is going to be one of my best books of the year, I can feel it. Not just the best middle grade book, but one of the best overall.

#TamaraReads #2021readingchallenge 77/2021

Happy reading,

Tamara

 

 

June 9 2021

Grown, by Tiffany D Jackson

Grown

Grown, by Tiffany D Jackson

Title: Grown
Author: Tiffany D Jackson
Genre/ issues: YA. #MeToo. Content warnings: mentions of sexual abuse, rape, assault, child abuse, kidnapping, opiod abuse.

Shop local where you can: For Australian readers, you can find this book on Booktopia, or support your local independent bookstore. US readers, check out Bookshop.org.

Grown, by Tiffany D Jackson is a book I really wanted to read, but sadly this is my first DNF for the year. I read the trigger warnings and should have listened – halfway through, I hit a point that was just too triggering for me. Rather than pushing through, I’m done, and will be passing this one onto another reader.
I will say – it’s very well written. Compelling narrative, interesting characters, and so good that I got to page 154 before my mental health self preservation kicked in. I don’t know what the second half is like, and I’m sure you can Google for feedback if you’re concerned. I am definitely adding this author to my list so I can check out her other work, and people I know who have read this have found it powerful and important, with a lot to say about the MeToo movement and the treatment of black girls by people in positions of power, particularly in the entertainment industry. If the trigger warnings are not concerning for you, then I’d highly recommend this book.

#TamaraReads #2021readingchallenge DNF

Happy reading,

Tamara

 

 

June 8 2021

Center of Gravity, by Shaunta Grimes

Center of Gravity

Center of Gravity, by Shaunta Grimes

Title: Center of gravity
Author: Shaunta Grimes
Genre/ issues: Middle grade. Family and relationships.

Shop local where you can: For Australian readers, you can find this book on Booktopia, or support your local independent bookstore. US readers, check out Bookshop.org.

I thought Center of Gravity by Shaunta Grimes was YA when I picked it up, and from the blurb I was expecting something quite heavy. Instead, I found myself immersed in a lovely, sad, but ultimately exceedingly hopeful middle grade novel about Tessa, who has always been anxious, and since her mother’s death has been cutting the photos of missing kids of milk cartoons and memorising their details, in an attempt to feel less alone. Then her father announces he is about to get remarried – and his much younger fiancée is pregnant. Tessa finds herself living in a new city, with a stepmother who has her own mental health issues, and a new group of friends who are facing their own family dramas. She soon realises that if she wants to gain control of her life, she might need to let go of a few things.
This book deals with some heavy topics – death of a parent, parental neglect and parental abuse amongst the most challenging of them. And whilst these aren’t easy topics to read about, they are handled with a lightness of touch that acknowledges their impact and seriousness without dwelling on the gory details. It’s a lovely piece of writing with an utterly beautiful cover!

#TamaraReads #2021readingchallenge 76/2021

Happy reading,

Tamara

 

 

June 8 2021

The Book of Chance, by Sue Whiting

Book of Chance

The Book of Chance, by Sue Whiting

Title: The Book of Chance
Author: Sue Whiting
Genre/ issues: Middle grade. Family and relationships. Mystery.

Shop local where you can: For Australian readers, you can find this book on Booktopia, or support your local independent bookstore. US readers, check out Bookshop.org.

It’s always a relief when you read a book by someone you know and like, and discover the book is really good so you don’t have to do that polite diplomatic review so you don’t offend or upset them! The Book of Chance by Sue Whiting is one of those. Mystery isn’t usually my genre, which is probably why it’s taken me a while to get to this one, but I thoroughly enjoyed it, and curled up on campus today with a coffee and a blanket scarf I devoured it in one sitting!
Chance Callahan has no time for fakery in her life, and holds everyone around her to pretty high standards. So what happens when Chance discovers a truth that threatens to derail her trust in someone she loves dearly, and to turn her world completely upside down?
I loved the structure which sees us start at the end of Chance’s story, the authentic characters, and the glimpses of Wollongong and its surrounds that are so familiar to me. This middle grade novel is totally worthy of its position on the CBCA younger readers shortlist this year, and is a masterclass in engaging and compelling storytelling. And phew – no diplomatic platitudes required in this review!
The only possible content warning, if you have sensitive young readers or those with recent vehicular trauma, is the (spoiler alert!!!) description of a car accident with multiple fatalities. Sensitively told, no explicit details, not traumatic unless it’s likely to be personally triggering for a reader. A cracker of an Australian novel for upper primary or lower secondary readers.

#TamaraReads #2021readingchallenge 75/2021

Happy reading,

Tamara

 

 

June 6 2021

Waking Romeo, by Kathryn Barker

Waking Romeo

Waking Romeo, by Kathryn Barker

Title: Waking Romeo
Author: Kathryn Barker
Genre/ issues: YA. Sci-fi. Dystopia. Time travel. Romeo + Juliet reimagining.

Shop local where you can: For Australian readers, you can find this book on Booktopia, or support your local independent bookstore. US readers, check out Bookshop.org.

Time travel. Dystopian end of the world. Rewritten familiar narratives. Questioning and twisting gender roles. I tell you, this book is going to be on my top 10 list for 2021, I can feel it.
The year is 2083. Jules is estranged from her family, and the love of her life Romeo is in a coma. And around her are only a handful of families, who have chosen to stay where they are rather than jump forward in time, the only direction they’re able to time travel, in search of a better life.
But then Ellis arrives – a mysterious time traveller, with a mission to wake Romeo, and Jules starts to question everything she knows about life and love.
I was expecting the Romeo and Julietesque nature of the narrative, but what I wasn’t prepared for was just how cleverly this would be woven through this fantastic novel by Kathryn Barker. R&J is my least favourite Shakespearean play, and I loved that all the things that annoy me about it get teased out and explored in Waking Romeo. I also love that one of my favourite pieces of classic literature also plays an important part in this impressive novel – I’d guessed at it when a certain character first started referencing his backstory, and was thrilled to discover I was right … but no spoilers. You should really read this yourself. It’s a powerful piece of work that can’t easily be defined by genre or the bounds of an Instagram description. I read this in one sitting, and it’ll be a book I return to in the future, I’m sure (pun intended!)

#TamaraReads #2021readingchallenge 74/2021

Happy reading,

Tamara

 

 

June 6 2021

Off the Map, by Scot Gardner

Off the map

Off the Map, by Scot Gardner

Title: Off the map
Author: Scot Gardner
Genre/ issues: YA. Short stories. Life in a small town. Australian fiction.

Shop local where you can: For Australian readers, you can find this book on Booktopia, or support your local independent bookstore. US readers, check out Bookshop.org.

There’s a prestigious history of Australian authors capturing the soul of our landscape in their writing. Lawson’s “sketch” short stories which capture a moment in the life of an outback family, where the bush looms large as perhaps the most significant character. Winton’s seascapes, evoking the depth and intensity of small town coastal WA. It may be a big call, but I’d add Off The Map by Scot Gardner to that list.
An anthology of short stories that present the triumphs and heartbreaks of the sons and daughters of an Australian town, both typical and unique. The diversity of stories, characters and ideas is carried throughout the collection, not by plot which is sparse, but by a beautifully measured sense of place. I know this isn’t about my hometown, but it equally could be. One of the stories could be mine. Another a friend I grew up with. And yet another, the family down the street whose comings and goings I used to wonder about.
The majority of these stories are suitable for a younger YA audience, but there is one that features content that may be more suitable to slightly older readers. I read this book yesterday in 2 sittings, and at the end of each story I took a moment to marvel, to ponder, and to wish I was in an English classroom so I could share it with my students. I’m not sure if it’ll be one of my top 5 books overall this year, but it’s certainly one I’m going to be recommending a lot!

#TamaraReads #2021readingchallenge 73/2021

Happy reading,

Tamara

 

 

June 5 2021

Cemetery Boys, by Aiden Thomas

Cemetery Boys

Cemetery Boys, by Aiden Thomas

Title: Cemetery Boys
Author: Aiden Thomas
Genre/ issues: YA. Fantasy. Queer fiction. Latinx fiction.

Shop local where you can: For Australian readers, you can find this book on Booktopia, or support your local independent bookstore. US readers, check out Bookshop.org.

I often talk about the power of books to transport you, allowing you to see the world through different viewpoints and experiences. Cemetery Boys by Aiden Thomas exemplifies this for me, in more wonderfully visceral ways than any book I’ve read in quite a while.
What happens when you summon a ghost – but it’s the wrong one, and he refuses to leave? Yadriel is from a long line of brujos, but his traditional Latinx father has problems accepting his gender, so he performs his quinces ceremony himself and sets out to find the ghost of his murdered cousin and set it free. Instead, he summons Julian, a guy he knows from school, who is just as shocked as Yads is because he didn’t know he was dead. Julian won’t go quietly, though, and wants to figure out what happened to him. Yadriel agrees to help,so they can both get what they want, but he quickly realises that he doesn’t want Julian to leave.
So, if you’re a follower of mine, you know a few things about me. I’m a white, cishet, English speaking middle class woman. I’m a proud SJW leftie and queer ally, so I have always tried to be open to other perspectives and experiences. But I have to say, this books was challenging for me. I don’t mean that with any negative connotations. It was a good challenge. I enjoyed teasing out the language and cultural references from context, and resorting to google translate to confirm I had it right. I also loved that it doesn’t homogenise culture, but celebrates the diversity of Latinx culture and identity, through the glorious preparations for and celebration of Día de los Muertos. Whilst I know a few trans people, and I do a lot of reading to educate myself so that I can be a good ally to my friends, family and community, I’ve never really questioned my own gender, so reading narratives from the point of view of trans characters is always an experience I enjoy, especially when they are so brilliantly crafted by an own-voices author. If you’re looking for a book that is first and foremost a cracking good read, but will also allow you to visit the unique and wonderful world of a trans Latinx teen coming to terms with his multifaceted identity, I’d highly recommend this.

#TamaraReads #2021readingchallenge 72/2021

Happy reading,

Tamara

 

 

June 4 2021

Labyrinth Coronation, volume 3

Labyrinth

Labyrinth Coronation, volume 3

Title: Labyrinth Coronation, volume 3
Author:
Illustrator:
Genre/ issues: Comics. Fantasy. Labyrinth backstory.

Shop local where you can: For Australian readers, you can find this book on Booktopia, or support your local independent bookstore. US readers, check out Bookshop.org.

“Through dangers untold, and hardships unnumbered … “
Jim Henson’s Labyrinth is one of my favourite movies, so when I discovered this series existed it was pretty much an insta-buy. I read the first 2 volumes last year and finally got around to number 3 today. Beautiful artwork, evocative storytelling, and an interesting parallel narrative that provides some context to Jareth’s backstory. Not the best comic I’ve ever read, but a completely enjoyable way to spend an hour or so on a lazy Friday!

#TamaraReads #2021readingchallenge 71/2021

Happy reading,

Tamara