Tuesday, June 3, 2014

The Future of Us by Jay Asher and Carolyn Macker

The Future of Us

Jay Asher and Carolyn Mackler; Razorbill; 356 pages.

First things first, this is a sweet book that I thoroughly enjoyed reading. I picked it up at the suggestion of a friend and read it during one of my overnight shifts. I hadn't read anything by Mackler before but I did read Thirteen Reasons Why by Asher and absolutely loved it so I decided to give this a try. I'm glad I did. 

This is story of two friends who discover Facebook, ten years before it is created. The two attempt to harness the power of Facebook but find that it creates more rifts than it heals. They are juniors in high school and very aware of their future and how they don't quite have everything together. They are hoping Facebook can fix that. 

My favorite aspect of this book is the love story. The two authors do a great job of setting it up, and teasing it through the whole novel but waiting to deliver until the very end. You won't be surprised by the ending but you will certainly be relieved. The romance is really what takes center stage in this novel; the technology really just serves as a catalyst, a sort of framing device. I also loved the voices of the two protagonists. The authors did a great job of capturing what it means to be a teenager, worried about the future and trying to figure out where you want to go. They do this by keeping us in first person and allowing the reader into the thoughts of these characters, while still letting the reader on to more than Emma or Josh know, or, rather, refuse to acknowledge. 

I mentioned earlier that the technology served mostly only to push the story along, which is fine, except it really did feel like an after-thought. It did it's job; it opened up the possibility of the future and served to prove how our decisions now affect our future. Maybe it's because I thought it would be more of a technology centered piece, but it fell short of its potential. 

Some of my favorites parts of the book where the references to quintessential 90's issues. I loved all the throwbacks! The novel takes place in 1996, so the authors had plenty of material to work with. They mention Dave Matthews Band, Wayne's World, and many more. They clearly did their research. It was fun to read about all the old-school stuff, even though I was only three '96 but, hey, I'm still a 90's girl!        

After reading the book and thinking about it some more, I realized that the title doesn't speak to the technology, or Facebook, but more to the individual characters. It's not the future of us as a society, but the future of individuals who make the best decisions in the moment, and, while aware of the future, are not afraid of it. It's a beautiful lesson that will speak to members of all age groups. I highly recommended this novel. 

I give The Future of Us 4 out of 5 cupcakes!                                                

Monday, March 3, 2014

A little bit about this blog

I suppose it would've made more logical sense if I introduced the blog before myself. That's the thing about me, though; my sense of logic is entirely my own.

This blog is, first and foremost, a blog about books. I love books; I love talking about books; I love writing about books; and, perhaps most importantly for this blog, I love hearing others opinions on books. So, please, read what I have to say and respond with your own thoughts in the comments. I will do my best to discuss the books with all of you. Please forgive me if I fall behind.

Some of these books will be new, some will be old. Some will be fiction, some will be non-fiction. Maybe someday I'll narrow the focus but, for now, it will be whatever I enjoy and want to discuss. I'm going to try and post other specials on different days of the month, for example, the first friday of every month will be a list of books and every other Monday I will link to different bookish articles I've been reading. I'm thoroughly excited to begin this adventure with all of you.

The book to get us started will be my favorite book of 2013 (can you believe we're already onto the 3rd month of 2014?) Life After Life by Kate Atkinson. It's a great novel and I can't wait to share my thoughts with you.

Friday, February 28, 2014

A little bit about myself

My least favorite part of interviews is when they ask the "how would you describe yourself" question. I'm never sure how to respond. Someday I'm happy and bubbly; others, I'm moody and reflective. Typically, I cater my answer to the person asking the question, so I'll cater my answer today for you, my dear reader. 

What do you want to know about me? Ask me in the comments, and if it's appropriate, I'll answer. 

I'm an avid reader. I come from a long line of readers; my Papa loves a good military novel and my Mama loves a mystery. I'm not sure I could ever narrow my focus as much as they both have but the books I love to read the most are YA. I'm a YA lover and proud and will make no apologies for the books I love. Have no fear, though, this blog will have plenty of variety. Like I said, I could never read only one genre. 

I'm a big fan of coffee. I'm currently teaching myself to like it black, mostly because I think it makes me seem more French. I'm a big fan of Doctor Who, Sherlock, Downton Abbey, and nearly anything the BBC or ITV puts out. I love pretending to be British. 

I'm happy; I'm bubbly; I'm difficult; I'm snarky. I never know how anything is going to turn out but I always wear a smile. 

Won't you join me in my wonderful reading adventure?