Showing posts with label issue books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label issue books. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Review: Dare You To, by Katie McGarry

Release date: June 7, 2013
Publisher: Harlequin UK
Format: Paperback, 352 pages

Goodreads description:
Ryan lowers his lips to my ear. "Dance with me, Beth."

"No." I whisper the reply. I hate him and I hate myself for wanting him to touch me again....

"I dare you..."

If anyone knew the truth about Beth Risk's home life, they'd send her mother to jail and seventeen-year-old Beth who knows where. So she protects her mom at all costs. Until the day her uncle swoops in and forces Beth to choose between her mom's freedom and her own happiness. That's how Beth finds herself living with an aunt who doesn't want her and going to a school that doesn't understand her. At all. Except for the one guy who shouldn't get her, but does....

Ryan Stone is the town golden boy, a popular baseball star jock-with secrets he can't tell anyone. Not even the friends he shares everything with, including the constant dares to do crazy things. The craziest? Asking out the Skater girl who couldn't be less interested in him.

But what begins as a dare becomes an intense attraction neither Ryan nor Beth expected. Suddenly, the boy with the flawless image risks his dreams-and his life-for the girl he loves, and the girl who won't let anyone get too close is daring herself to want it all...


The following review is based on a copy I got from the publisher via NetGalley in exchange for my honest opinion.


Review:
From the moment I finished Pushing the Limits (read my review here), I knew that I wanted to read anything else Katie McGarry writes. I itched to get my hands on Dare You To as soon as I read the sneak peek in the back of my ARC. And I wasn’t disappointed! Once more Katie McGarry delivers an achingly realistic tale with complex characters.

I was a little thrown going into the story because I expected it to be that of Beth and Isaiah, and I was a tad reluctant to really take to Ryan. He’s not the type of guy I usually like, but he also ended up being a very different person from what I’d first expected. Trust me: once you see things from Beth’s point of view, you’ll realize why she and Isaiah wouldn’t work.

Beth doesn’t have many prospects in life, to a large part because she keeps being dragged down by her alcoholic mother. She’s the one to juggle the bills, to try to keep them somehow afloat, and to drag her mom home from the bar. But after a confrontation with her mother’s violent boyfriend ends at the police station, she is picked up by the man she least expected – her father’s brother, Scott, who is now her legal guardian and loses no time in taking her away from her ‘home’ and friends in the city out to his small town. Her relationship with Scott is weighed down by past issues and by his quasi-hero status in town for his success in baseball.

Baseball is what connects Scott to Ryan, whose father pushes him towards a professional career in the sport instead of going to college. When I first ‘met’ Ryan, I thought he was your usual cocky jock, used to getting whatever he wants when he wants it. The dares he and his friends challenge each other with range from hilarious to retarded, and his motto of ‘I don’t lose’ annoyed me in the beginning. However, I learned to respect him and his passion for the sport. He was very different to what I expected and behaved in a respectful way towards other people – he’s a good guy with many more talents than just baseball, even though it takes him a while to admit that to himself and act on it. Much of his arc focuses on his relationship to his overbearing father (whom I wanted to throttle) and how much he is willing to sacrifice in order to please him.

When Beth and Ryan meet, sparks fly. Sometimes they’re angry sparks, sometimes they’re steamy sparks, but the chemistry between them is undeniable. What starts as a dare eventually becomes more than either of them would have expected, and I loved seeing them struggle against their emotions, challenge each other, and eventually learn to trust one another despite the many obstacles people put in the way of their relationship. Especially Beth is constantly jerked from one side to the other as she realizes she has a chance at a new life, at hope for a future, but can’t let go of her past and doesn’t want to forsake her friends and her mother. Though from the outside, Beth and Ryan’s home lives look like opposites, both their families are rotten at the core.

In my opinion, Dare You To was well-paced, with a good balance between more action-focused and dramatic scenes as well as calmer moments where McGarry’s skill at character development is given room to unfold itself. I alternately hurt, raged, and occasionally turned into a puddle of goo (I will never look at rain water in the same way). The story is never boring but I also never felt like I was being breathlessly hurried along. The characters’ conflicting emotions and Beth’s traumatic past need time to unravel and become real to the reader. Yet despite the many dark themes in the novel, there were also lighter, more humorous moments, usually in the dialogue between Beth and various other people.

Dare You To is a story of hope, guilt, rising above oneself and one’s station, sticking up for what and who you love, and about how much you’re willing to give up for your family. The novel is highly emotional but McGarry’s no-nonsense prose leaves no space for cheap drama. For those of you who want more of Echo and Noah - they have short guest appearances but the focus is clearly on Beth, Ryan, and to an extent Isaiah (who will get his own novel).

My one sort-of-complaint is that though the emotions were very well-crafted and believable, somehow the story didn’t impact me quite as much as Pushing the Limits did. It made me tear up, but I never cried. I was satisfied but missed that feeling of catharsis. That might just be me though, or the overall state of mind I was in. I definitely enjoyed how well-crafted the story was and how the various layers and issues played into one another!

If you like contemporaries dealing with tough but realistic topics and romance between strong characters, you will enjoy this one! I’d recommend it to the more mature YA readers though because of language, drug abuse, and sexually charged situations.

Have you guys read Pushing the Limits? Are you excited about Dare You To? What's your take on this story or on others dealing with similar issues? If you've read both of Katie McGarry's books, which one did you like better? Let me know in the comments :)

Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Top Ten Tuesday: books dealing with tough subjects

Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly feature hosted by The Broke and the Bookish. Every week the participants post their top ten to a specific topic.


To this week's topic is all about books dealing with difficult subjects like abuse, suicide, grief, or other issues that are personally hard for us.
It was kind of difficult to come up with 10 books for this that I've actualy read. I'm not usually one for 'problem books' because I identify way too much and it drags me down. Also, I realized that I could name quite a few books that have an issue woven into them somewhere but it isn't the main focus. So here are 10 books of varying intensity that I read and enjoyed.


Glenraven_27's books with tough subjects album on Photobucket


The Language of Flowers, by Vanessa Diffenbaugh
This was the first contemporary book I'd read in a looong time. I mainly picked it up because it was set in San Francisco and because the heroine was a foster kid. And there we're also already at one of the issues the book deals with. Victoria is a heroine that is hard to understand at the beginning, but the unfolding tale is wonderful, heartbreaking, and beautifully written. One of the things that happen to her is among my big no-nos when it comes to choosing my reads but it was handled wonderfully here! It's about homelessness, not belonging, grief, mother-daughter relationships, loss, love... and it left me with this feeling of catharsis. I cried, but I felt better at the end.


Pushing The Limits, by Katie McGarry
I know a lot of people would probably classify this book as romance but I think it also handles tough issues like grief (Echo's brother), mental illness, trauma, and the foster system. It makes the characters' pain real. It made me laugh and cry and swoon and get angry. I loved it so much even though emotionally it got heavy at times, for me at least. You can check out my review here.


Girls Love Travis Walker, by Anne Pfeffer
I *just* finished that one and really loved it! Travis is a guy with real-life problems. Having to drop school in order to support himself and his sick mum, the threat of eviction hanging over his head, knowing that the 5 dollars in you pockets are all the money you own in the world... he took quite a heavy fall but I liked how much of a backbone he had, and there were lighthearted scenes to balance things out.


The Breakaway / Pieces, by Michelle Davidson Argyle
I was part of the tour for these two and they had such a huge impact on me! Naomi's mental situation and the way she dealt with her kidnapping (and the aftermath!) were so real to me. I felt with her. I ached and hoped for her. It's also a book about finding your own way though, and about several types of dependent relationships. If you want to know more, check out my review.


Notes from the Blender, by Trish Cook and Brendan Halpin
Notes from the blender is an extremely fun read, but it also deals with issues about patchwork families, grief, guilt, and finding out where you belong. I devoured it in a day. Definitely one of my favorite contemporaries!


Hunger, by Jackie Morse Kessler
This one was personally hard for me to read. It deals with anorexia and bulimia and the physical, emotional, and social consequences that come with it. It's all wrapped up in the paranormal element of the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse but the describtion of Lisabeth's situation hit very close to home for me. I really want to read the next books in the series!


Wintergirls, by Laurie Halse Anderson
Same as above, only more extreme. My experiences thankfully never went as far as that of Lia, the heroine, but I still saw more of myself at a certain point in my life in her than I would have liked. This one packs a real punch but it handles the issue really well, in my opinion. If you know someone suffering through the hell of anorexia and want to understand them better, this book might help.


Ultraviolet, by R.J. Anderson
This is eventually a paranormal book but it also deals with mental illness, being committed against one's will, asylums in general, and several kinds of abuse. I was glued to the page and need to read the sequel, Quicksilver, asap!


In the Shadow of Blackbirds, by Cat Winters
This one is set in 1918 during the Spanish Influenza. The description of a city filling up with corpses, the horrors of WWI, the grief of those mourning both the sick and the fallen soldiers of the war, was palpable to me. It also deals with the fear and paranoia of treason, with women's lot in the early 20th century, and with ghosts. Oh, and it's simply brilliant :)


Carrie, by Stephen King
I know many would probably classify this one as horror but for me, it's so much more and else than that. I was 16 when I read it for the first time and I identified with Carrie so much! Like her, I'd been bullied for years on end. I didn't have a religiously crazy mother to deal with like she did, but otherwise she basically got to do what I'd dreamed about quite a few times: revenge. With telekinetic powers.



This is it... I think I got in quite a few different ones. I also have a bunch of books dealing with tough issues on my kindle that I haven't read yet. What do you guys think of my list? Do you know any of the books? I'm also curious about everyone else's picks, so link me up :)