Looks

Looks by Madeleine George.

Released June 2008.

Meghan is an enormous girl who spends her lonely days in high school virtually invisible, except when she is mercilessly tormented by a group of the popular jocks.  Because she is often overlooked, she knows things about almost everyone at school.  That’s why she is intrigued when Aimee starts school.  Aimee is stick thin and struggling with an eating disorder and has no interest in being friends with Meghan who can’t manage to talk coherently when she approaches her.  When both girls are betrayed by the same person, they haltingly start a friendship for revenge.

The language of this book is pure poetry.  I know that is something often said about prose, but in this case it is entirely true.  Here is a paragraph from Page 12 of the novel to demonstrate:

Here in the dark she disappears completely, her body dissolves, but every one of her senses sharpens: vision, scent, memory, hearing.  Meghan tilts her head toward the door and curves her whole self into a listening device.  She wakes up every sleeping cell in her body to listen.  She makes her skin listen, she makes her eyelashes listen.  She stills her breath, lets it in and out of her lungs in faint wisps.  She listens so hard she feels her heartbeat slow.

The book is like that, taking you so deeply into characters, exposing them, looking beyond the surface to the people they are inside with all of their fascinating drives, needs and fears.  In doing this, neither of the main characters can possibly be stereotypical.  Meghan is seen as dainty at times, graceful, lovely.  Aimee as sharp in voice and in spirit.  Both as cautious kindred spirits brought together by far more than betrayal and revenge. 

There are so many layers here to immerse readers.  This is a book that celebrates unique people, lingers in painful moments, displays beauty where none seemed to exist.  It is a book that sings in tribute of these two disparate but similar characters.  It is a wonder of a teen novel. 

Highly recommended, this book will find those who will relate to it by the great cover.  Hand this one to teens who go their own way and they will find two characters to revel in and one amazing novel to call their own.

Playing with Fire

Skulduggery Pleasant: Playing with Fire by Derek Landy

This was one book I was thrilled to get my hands on at PLA, and it was even better than my high expectations.

Valkyrie Cain continues to find adventure at the side of the living-dead skeleton Skulduggery Pleasant.  This time Baron Vengeous has escaped prison and is attempting to bring the Grotesquery to life in order to bring back the Faceless Ones.  The Grotesquery is a monster created from different pieces of beasts from legend, brought together into one horrific and powerful being.  As they try to stop Baron Vengeous, Valkyrie and Skulduggery run into a variety of strange beings who have incredible powers and who are always ready for a good fight.  Fans of the first book will also be happy to see many of their favorite characters appear again.

A wild ride of a book, the battles are gory, choreographed and often funny.  The book continues the strong sense of humor, laugh out-loud commentary, and vibrant relationship of the two main characters.  Plenty of banter and wit as well as some deeper questions about life make this a winner of a novel. 

This is not a stand-alone title.  Readers must have read the first in the series to really appreciate this one.  Highly recommended for fans of action films and science fiction ages 10-14.