Relish: My Life in the Kitchen, by Lucy Knisley (book review) – yummy graphic novel of foodie memories

book cover of Relish My Life in the Kitchen by  Lucy Knisley published by First SecondMom the chef, Dad the gourmet,
Lucy the adventurous eater
(and secret junk food lover).

Memoir, graphic novel, and best-of-best recipes for your delectation fill this yum-worthy tale of artist Lucy Knisley‘s growing-up years in a food-worshiping household.

If reading Relish doesn’t make you want to try your hand at rolling sushi or making your own summer pickles (it’s all drawn there for you in vivid color), well, then you should just page back through and stir up some Carbonara or Mom’s Pesto.

What foods bring back wonderful memories of your younger years?
Have you captured those recipes already?
**kmm

Book info: Relish: My Life in the Kitchen / written and illustrated by Lucy Knisley. First Second Books, 2013.  [author site]  [publisher site]

My book talk: Being raised by food-lovers gives Lucy a unique perspective on all aspects of growing, locating, preparing, and (most of all) enjoying the wonderful eats of the world. Her artistic abilities and touchstone recipes capture these food memories on the page in appetizing color.

Her mom headed up famed NYC emporium Dean and DeLuca’s cheese department while expecting Lucy; that explains much about their shared delight in dairy products. After her parents divorced, the city kid found herself deep in the country as her chef-mother began a gourmet vegetable farm and kicked off area farmers’ markets. The freshness of the produce made up a little for the lack of taxis and take-out, but Lucy did enjoy going back to Manhattan to visit her dad and fine restaurants there (he loved Mom’s cooking, but didn’t ever cook).

Through her growing-up years, Lucy mastered the ultimate chocolate chip cookie as a way to connect with new classmates (and shares her recipe), ate her way through a small Mexican town (oh, Huevos Rancheros!), helped her mom during catering gigs (leftover pesto is great), and headed off to art school in Chicago with her tastebuds ready for foods both familiar and new.

This graphic novel autobiography will whisk readers to far-off places (imagine being allergic to soy in Japan!), peaceful country farms (except for those malicious geese), and eateries large and small as the artist shares her favorite recipes and her lifelong foodie love affair with Relish.  (One of 6,000 books recommended on www.abookandahug.com) Review copy and cover image courtesy of the publisher.

A Corner of White, by Jaclyn Moriarty (book review) – barrier between worlds slips, danger enters

US book cover of A Corner of White by Jaclyn Moriarty published by Arthur A Levine BooksColors so strong that they’re living entities,
Skies so gray that they smother all cheerfulness,
One white piece of paper forges a forbidden link between worlds.

Elliot’s family and neighbors try to raise crops in a land where summer could arrive four times in a month or never all year.  Madeleine’s latest attempt to run away from her wealthy parents somehow dragged her mother along, too. Communication between their two worlds is treason in the Kingdom of Cello, unknown by Madeleine’s world… and suddenly happens.

I wish that the US cover (at top right) were more like the original Australian cover (below right) which better reflects the colors and whimsicality of the story (yes, Madeleine wears bright colors to counteract the gray Cambridge weather, but that’s not the real essence of color in the story).

Grab this one today at your local library or independent bookstore to slide through that narrow gap between the Kingdom of Cello and The World – and prepare to be entranced.

Would you dare to communicate with someone if it were forbidden, illegal, necessary for your mental health?
**kmm

Book info: A Corner of White (The Colors of Madeleine, book 1) / Jaclyn Moriarty. Arthur A. Levine Books, 2013.  [author site]  [publisher site]  [author interview video]

My book talk: Separated by a spectral barrier for their own good, The World and the Kingdom of Cello haven’t communicated in 300 years. Yet through a small crevice, a boy and a girl send letters back and forth, perhaps changing both for the better, perhaps setting dire danger into motion.Australian book cover of A Corner of White by Jaclyn Moriarty published by PanMacmillanAustralia

Elliot is ready out again to search for his father who was kidnapped a year ago by the rogue Purple that killed his uncle, while his neighbors anxiously await the Selectors who might choose their town for the Princess Sisters’ tour of the Kingdom. His pal Cody makes all the unrepairable machines from Dad’s shop into a sculpture in the schoolyard, and one day Elliot notices a small note stuck in it, a note that’s not from anyone in Bonfire…

As Mum answers every quiz show question wrong, Madeleine wonders yet again how they came to be here – an attic apartment in a university town, eating baked beans again – when just months ago they were jetsetting around the world with her financier father, platinum credit cards at the ready.

Thank goodness for Jack and Belle and for their home-schooling arrangement, so none of them have to deal with the bullies and drama of high school. Jack’s uncle makes their minds stretch with his assignment to ‘become’ the Cambridge historical figure selected from the hat – that’s Isaac Newton for Mad, Charles Babbage for Belle, Lord Byron for Jack.

As Madeleine muses on Newton and Cambridge, she passes an out-of-service parking meter with a note stuck in it “Help! I’m being held against my will!” and decides to answer it, little imagining that it’s a message from a world that’s been sealed off from ours for over three centuries.

The correspondence between Elliot and Madeleine is interesting, as he knows about The World from history class and she thinks he’s a just local who’s trying a huge hoax. Trying to explain the color attacks and momentary seasons of Cello doesn’t convince her of the Kingdom’s reality, but something finally does.

Why is it so dangerous to have an opening between Cello and The World?
Will the Princess Sisters visit Bonfire once the Butterfly Child arrives?
Would Jack and Belle ever believe Madeleine about Cello?

Escapes and worries, attacks and misunderstandings – so much begins when that corner of white paper crosses the gap from the Kingdom of Cello to Cambridge, England. First in a series that mixes teen concerns with philosophical science, family drama with political intrigue, and what-is-not-now with what-might-someday-be. (One of 6,000 books recommended on www.abookandahug.com) Review copy and cover image courtesy of the publisher.

William and the Lost Spirit, by Gwen de Bonneval and Matthieu Bonhomme (book review) – quest for father trapped in time

book cover of William and the Lost Spirit by Gwen de Bonneval, art by Matthieu Bonhomme, published by Graphic UniverseA way-finding goat,
Mythical creatures and legendary people,
Trust your spirit, not your eyes.

Hilane is sure that Father is alive when everyone else thinks he’s dead, and her quest to find him turns into brother William’s odyssey through lands of fable and myth to discover a way to release his spirit from whoever (or whatever) holds it captive.

Brigands and knights and political treachery are all part of this sweeping medieval tale in graphic novel format.

Is their father dead or alive? You’ll have to read William and the Lost Spirit for yourself to find out.

May your Father’s Day be much less-adventurous than William and Hilane’s travels!
**kmm

Book info: William and the Lost Spirit / Gwen de Bonneval; art by Matthieu Bonhomme; translation and commentary by Ann and Owen Smith. Graphic Universe, 2013.   [author Facebook – in French]  [artist biography]  [publisher site]  [book trailer]

My book talk: Bandits roam the French countryside and their widowed mother prepares to wed the seneschal for safety, but William and his sister Hilane still sense their father’s life-force and undertake a treacherous journey to find him.

As the Count’s business manager, the seneschal should have ensured that the knights have the resources to clear the area of bandits, yet somehow the peasants are still being killed or run off. Now that Brifaut is marrying the widow of the Count’s son, he will receive a title and much of the abandoned land. Hilane and William think that their father’s “death” was most suspicious – how can a healer die of unknown poison?

When Hilane runs away before the wedding, William follows, turning to their other-worldly aunt Ysane for clues to her whereabouts and meeting up with a Crusades-experienced knight, a troubadour, and a friendly goat. Ysane says that William’s father is alive in “the Far-Off Lands” and that he’ll be guided on his journey as needed. So off they go, encountering turn-coat knights, fearsome creatures, Prester John of legend, and many perils along the way.

Can William find Hilane before it’s too late?
Will he survive the challenges and bring justice to his grandfather’s land?
Is his father truly alive?

This action-packed French graphic novel includes all three original volumes of William’s adventures, plus extensive commentary by the translators in the US publication.  (One of 6,000 books recommended on www.abookandahug.com) Review copy and cover image courtesy of the publisher.

Magic visions, compelling stories – this week’s SYNC audiobook features

Hurry to download this week’s free audiobooks from SYNC  by June 19th, and dive into two different worlds of magical visions.

Remember that although each week’s complete audiobooks are only available from Thursday through Wednesday, you have free use of them as long as you keep their Overdrive Media files on your computer or electronic device.
 

CD cover for audiobook of The Raven Boys by Maggie Stiefvater read by Will Patton published by Scholastic AudiobooksThe Raven Boys
By Maggie Stiefvater
Read by Will Patton
Published by Scholastic Audiobooks

 

 

CD cover of audiobook Bless Me Ultima by Rudolfo Anaya read by Robert Ramirez published by Recorded Books
Bless Me, Ultima
By Rudolfo Anaya
Read by Robert Ramirez
Published by Recorded Books
This title is only available to listeners in the USA and Canada.
 

Will the power of magical visions solve problems in this world? Read and find out!
**kmm

Spy School, by Stuart Gibbs (book review) – secret agents, wannabe agents, double agent!

book cover of Spy School by Stuart Gibbs published by Simon SchusterPlanning ideal future career,
Investigating opportunities,
Tripping over both feet
CIA material or not?

Ask kids what they want to be when they grow up, and they’ll give a list of amazing, exciting jobs – astronaut, firefighter, doctor – but Ben isn’t just dreaming about becoming a spy; he’s written to the Central Intelligence Agency numerous times about it!

Now in paperback, this Edgar Award nominee should be easy to find at your local library or independent bookstore, but try not to look too conspicuous as you pick up your copy… you do want to be around to see what happens to Ben and compatriots when they get to Spy Camp,  right?

I wonder if they really do recruit middle schoolers for covert training….
**kmm

Book info:  Spy School / Stuart Gibbs.  Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers, 2012 (paperback 2013).  [author site]  [publisher site]  [author interview]

My book talk: A secret agent in his living room, telling him to get ready to go to spy school! Ben’s biggest dream is about to come true. If he doesn’t get maimed or killed during his first day, he might be able to find the mole who’s endangering CIA operations from within…

As agent Alexander Hale tells him, “When you express an interest in the CIA, the CIA becomes interested in you,” and the Agency has been keeping close tabs on the 12-year-old for quite a while. Naturally, his parents and classmates have to think that he’s at an elite science school in nearby Washington, D.C. – no one can know that he’s entering the Academy of Espionage.

Coming in during the middle of the year isn’t easy at any school, but Academy class subjects make Ben’s transition much harder. Math and science are Ben’s gifts, not hand-to-hand combat (he’ll need tutoring), covert target shooting (practice, practice, practice), or clandestine surveillance (yep, behind in that, too).

Luckily, Erica has all those skills and is willing to help him improve, although Ben begins to wonder just why he’s at the Academy and who dropped out at midterm leaving the spot open for him. Other students aren’t a bit friendly, and he realizes that competition for the best CIA assignments in real life begins here inside the Academy.

When bullies Chip and Hauser vanish into thin air during a paintball attack and a bomb found underground exposes a true threat to the Academy, it’s time for Ben and Erica to do some extra-credit work. A few glitches might be accidental, but the increasingly serious incidents point to sabotage…which may endanger national security!

Can Ben and Erica discover which of their classmates is a double-agent?
Can they convince the adults in charge of the danger?
Can Ben survive until his final exams this semester?

Washington D.C. landmarks are supporting characters in this series-starter filled with action, secrets, and math whiz tricks.  (One of 6,000 books recommended on www.abookandahug.com) Review copy and cover image courtesy of the publisher.

ARCs, book reviewers, and maxed-out shelves (reflective) – facts, opinion, and a shared rant

woman in green shirt reading newspaper

(c) ClipartHeaven.com

Have you ever wondered how those book reviews get into your local paper, national television shows, and blogs before  you can actually buy the book?

The answer is as simple as ARC – advance reader copies, also known as advance readers’ editions. proofs, “galleys” or F&Gs (for picture books).  Whether print or digital, these ARCs are essentially final drafts of the book, so they include typographical errors which will be corrected before the book goes to print, often have placeholders for spot art or illustrations, and frequently include the initials TK to indicate information that’s “to come” in the published book (no one seems to know why this isn’t TC).

Reviewers know that these things will all get fixed before the public reads the book; we just skip around and over the glitches so we can read the story or text and be able to write our review/recommendation for the audience that we address. Publishers are hoping that our reviews will create enough “buzz” to spur sales of the book and make up for the high cost of print ARCs.

What happens to print ARCs after reviewers read them should be crystal-clear, as every ARC I’ve ever held says plainly “uncorrected proof – NOT FOR SALE” or some variation of those terms.

It infuriates me when anyone sells ARCs on eBay or anywhere else, as this (1) violates the terms that allowed that person to acquire the ARC, (2) takes revenue away from the authors and their publishers since the ARC buyer probably won’t purchase the finished book, and -worse- (3) puts an imperfect copy of the author’s work into a reader’s hands when that person is unlikely to realize what an ARC is and why it’s not “a real book.” I’m not alone in ranting about this – see Afewmorepages’ post here as she collects several blog posts about not selling ARCs.

Of course, that means I cannot donate print ARCs to Goodwill, Salvation Army, or other charitable group which sells items (reselling is still reselling), nor can they go into a library’s collection unless the ARC is purposely there for comparison with the finished book (maybe in a university library to support a publishing degree program?). As selective as I am in requesting ARCs which fit into BooksYALove’s stated goals – young adult books beyond bestsellers, especially by debut authors and smaller presses – I still have lots and lots of ARCs.

What to do with ARCs and still do the right thing? Simplest yet hardest thing to do is just “pulp” them by tearing apart and putting the ARC into the recycling bin (“but…” I sniffle, “it still is a book…”), just as I would any misprint paper.

Thankfully, some publishers have begun including this wording in their ARCs: “After the publication date of this book , please consider thoughtfully donating this ARC to a juvenile detention facilty, shelter or other youth program” – THAT is a win-win-win scenario! Kids who’d otherwise have no access at all to books can get books to keep; the books don’t wind up as landfill fodder; the authors’ works are enjoyed and read and re-read by their target audience.

So where are my ARCs going? For sure, the upcoming fall collection by HEB grocery stores for their Read 3 program, which I discovered at the Texas Library Association annual conference last year. I’m also checking with area agencies that serve at-risk youth.  Everyone will win… and my bookshelves will be happy!

Where would you send ARCs in your area?
**kmm

Clipart image of woman reading newspaper (c)ClipartHeaven.com

Criminal, by Terra Elan McVoy (book review by guest blogger Alison Law) – bold and brutal exploration of bad decisions and their consequences

It’s guest blogger day on Blogathon 2013, so let’s welcome “Southern Spines” blogger Alison Law to BooksYALove!

She’s bringing us a quick peek into Terra Elan McVoy’s newest book, Criminal  (which is soooo good). I’ve previously recommended Terra’s novel-in-verse After the Kiss  and her rock-music-themed Being Friends With Boys  (click link for my no-spoilers book talk in a new window).

As Terra and Alison ask – how far would you go for love?
**kmm

+++++

headshot of author Terra Elan McVoy

author Terra Elan McVoy

Inspired by a news story about a young man accused of murdering his girlfriend’s parent with another girl as his accomplice, Terra Elan McVoy asks the reader, “How far would you go for love?” She searches for the answer to that question from the perspective of her main character, Nikki, who has unknowingly become an accessory to murder.

Read an excerpt from the book here.

Book info: Criminal / Terra Elan McVoy. Simon Pulse, 2013. [author site] [publisher site] [video author interview]

book cover of Criminal by Terra Elan McVoy published by Simon PulseAlison’s book talk: As the title foretells, Criminal  is a dark departure from McVoy’s first four YA novels. Protagonist Nikki lives with her friend Bird, a young single mom, in a tough neighborhood in Atlanta. Nikki fled her family home because her mom is a drug addict who often brings home questionable characters. With no family support, Nikki clings to love where she can find it, even if it’s Dee, her on-again/off-again boyfriend who often mistreats her.

McVoy makes an interesting choice to begin the book the morning after the crime has taken place; the details of what happened are revealed in subsequent chapters in a plot-thickening, satisfying way. Readers discover along with Nikki just how deeply entangled she is in Dee’s deceptions and witness Nikki’s troubles multiply as she lies to protect the man she loves.

No one reading the book can deny that Nikki is a criminal — the facts are very plain. Yet, anyone who has survived young adulthood and a relationship with a “bad boy” or “bad girl” will relate to Nikki’s predicament. Readers see what Nikki cannot, but grieve right along with her when she realizes that the person she trusted, loved and sacrificed for has betrayed her.

In their starred review of Criminal, Publishers Weekly said that what McVoy “gets so powerfully right in this novel is the way that love can descend like a fog, impairing one’s judgment and obscuring the truth.”

headshot photo of Alison Law of SouthernSpines.comGuest Blogger Bio: Alison Law is a professional writer and marketing and social media consultant based in Atlanta, Georgia. As owner of Alison Law Communications, she has worked with a variety of clients, including published authors and book publicity firms, public relations and advertising agencies, attorneys, accountants, veterinarians and other professional service providers.

Her career began twenty years ago in a newsroom in her hometown of Chattanooga, Tennessee. She spent almost seven years in various editorial and management positions at television stations in Chattanooga, Lexington, Kentucky and Baltimore, Maryland.

In 2012, Alison combined her editorial, online marketing and social media skills to launch SouthernSpines.com, an online community dedicated to celebrating and promoting southern writers, songwriters and poets, and “Books with Backbone.” Alison is a member of the She Reads Book Blogger network.

Alison is a part-time graduate student at Georgia State University where she is pursuing a master’s degree in English with a concentration in literary studies. She’s also “football widow” and fan club president to husband Zach Law, a successful fantasy and pro football writer. When not reading or writing…or reading some more…Alison is catching up on her neglected DVR queue with her two cats, Sting and Chewie.

Book cover image and review copy courtesy of the publisher. Terra’s photo and Alison’s photo appear courtesy of SouthernSpines.com.

Being Henry David, by Cal Armistead (book review) – memory gone, called to Walden

book cover of Being Henry David by Cal Armistead published by Albert WhitmanNo luggage, no memory,
No memory, no past…
Why? Why did he erase his own memories?

From wherever home was, teenage “Hank” finds himself alone in a train station with only a copy of Henry David Thoreau’s Walden  and knows that he must get to Walden Pond, just as the author did, to discover truth through nature and perhaps find the strength to face his past.

Read an excerpt of the book here as you dive into the story of why a young man abandons his memory and decides that Being Henry David  is much better than being himself.

Can deciding that a memory doesn’t exist change the past?
**kmm

Book info: Being Henry David / Cal Armistead. Albert Whitman, 2013.  [author site]  [publisher site]  [video author interview]

My book talk: Waking up in Penn Station alone, no memories. None. Looking in washroom mirror, he sees a teenage guy with black hair, gray eyes, a big lump on his head. He has ten bucks in his front pocket and a copy of Walden – that’s it. He’ll be Henry David, after its author, until he can remember his own name or past or why he can’t remember…

Another teen rescues him from a homeless guy who wants to eat the book, nicknames him Hank because Henry David is too long, takes him to a hidden place to sleep, and gets him involved with some drug dealers who need more runners. After a knife fight, running seems like an excellent idea, so Jack splits the drug money and Hank gets on the train for Concord, looking for answers at Walden Pond, the only glimmer of memory he’s got.

Thoreau’s cabin site is easy to find, says Hailey, the girl he meets at the station. But Hank can’t understand why there is no cabin at the cabin site, just four rock cornerstones and a slab… cold sleeping tonight, and dreams where Thoreau speaks to him.

Is Thoreau there in the flesh in the morning? No, it’s Thomas, who does historical interpretations at Walden Pond and is the town reference librarian, heavily tattooed and riding a Harley. He shares breakfast with Hank, shares hia appreciation for Thoreau’s vision of a simpler life, but doesn’t pry into Hank’s affairs.

In Concord, Hank scopes out Hailey’s high school as a place to stay over the weekend, trying to avoid the blackness that erupts when he probes his memories. Visiting the town library to read more about Thoreau, Hank passes out as the infected knife wound clobbers his system and Thomas takes him home.

Hank’s fingers remember how to play the guitar – can he help Hailey in the Battle of the Bands?
Thomas suggests checking the missing teens database – can he find himself?
The blackness holding back his memories wavers – can he live with what he remembers?

Whether runaways or kidnapped, lost, strayed or stolen, so many stories of teens gone from home have unhappy endings – read Being Henry David to see if Hank’s story is one of them. (One of 6,000 books recommended on www.abookandahug.com) Review copy and cover image courtesy of the publisher.

Furious, by Jill Wolfson (book review) – the Furies reborn or vengeance unleashed?

book cover of Furious by Jill Wolfson published by Henry HoltThe tree-hugger, the surfer chick, and the outcast foster kid,
All angry, all the time,
Where is the justice in this world?

This modern retelling of the Greek tale of the three Furies is set in a coastal California town high school, where small unkindnesses can become overlarge events and grudges erupt into feuds too easily. Add an outside influence with less-than-clear motives for nudging things into motion, and it gets ‘interesting’ in a hurry.

Read Ambrosia’s thoughts in the prologue  here and an excerpt from Meg’s point of view here, then get ready to step into the violent whirl of life, injustice, and vengeance that makes these girls so Furious.

Is righting wrongs worth the price of losing everything else?
**kmm

Book info: Furious / Jill Wolfson.  Henry Holt & Co., 2013.  [author site]  [publisher site]

My book talk: Meg is a late-bloomer, always on the fringes, barely tolerated by her foster mother, ignored by everyone at school except best (and only) friend Raymond…until stunning Ambrosia pulls her into a class project group and unleashes something in Meg she never knew she had – and never should have awakened.

Whether she hates the birth mother who abandoned her more than she loathes her foster homes is as much a question for Meg as why she and vibrant Raymond clicked as friends. He understands why she found herself verbalizing her hatred for everyone at school who’s excluded her, right? Meg felt something deep and real within herself when she stood on her desk and finally said it out loud.

Ambrosia understands why Meg did it, and the beautiful sophisticate also understands why Alix hates anyone mocking her special needs brother and why Stephanie hates attacks on nature and the environment. For their Western Civilization creative project (with Raymond, who won’t be left out), she suggests that they investigate the Furies and justice and retribution.

Meg and Alix and Stephanie discover that if they sing together the song humming in their bones, they can dive into the minds of the wicked and stop malicious behavior. Ambrosia teaches and encourages their quest to right wrongs, while their Western Civ teacher Ms. Pallas tries to warn them of the thin line between justice and vengeance.

Can the trio bring peace and order to Hunter High?
Why did Ambrosia choose them?
How can Meg balance her thirst for retribution with her desire to be loved?

The tale of the three Furies leaps from ancient Greece to a fog-shrouded coastal California town as the teens must decide if they are really the Furies reborn or merely pawns in a sinister game.  (One of 6,000 books recommended on www.abookandahug.com) Review copy and cover image courtesy of the publisher.

Pieces, by Chris Lynch (book review) – brother’s organs donated, life still in pieces

book cover of Pieces by Chris Lynch published by Simon SchusterPulling the plug means giving up,
Giving up all hope that he’ll come out of the coma,
That he’ll wake up again for his brother and best friend.
How can they say goodbye?

This family’s tough decision is made the tiniest bit better by knowing that their 20-year-old son’s organs will improve life for several other people.

Today and every day, 18 people in America will die waiting for an organ transplant. Read answers to myths about organ donation, talk to your family about it, sign up at your state registry or on your driver license as an organ donor, and hope the day never comes.

While Pieces  is the sequel to Iceman,  in this book you get enough glimpses of irreverent Duane in Eric’s reminiscences of his big brother  to have the gist of their relationship. But I’m sure that reading Iceman  first (just out in paperback this spring) would add even more to this journey of discovery, with all its stops and starts and roller-coaster emotions.

Lynch tackled a similarly tough topic in Hothouse  (my recommendation here) as best friends who are sons of best-buddy firefighters must cope with their fathers’ deaths amid questions about that last fire they fought together.

How do you go on when a vital person in your life is gone?
**kmm

Book info: Pieces / Chris Lynch. Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers, 2013.   [author interview]  [author video interview]   [publisher site]

My book talk: Diving into unknown water was so like Duane. Eric didn’t want to let his big brother and best friend go, but their parents decided organ donation is the right thing. Now pieces of Duane are inside other people all over New England, and Eric finally decides to find out how that changed their lives.

As the life support machines beeped, Eric pleaded with Duane to wake up, to get back to his crazy self, to stay with him as his best (maybe only) friend. But no miracle occurred, despite Mom’s constant prayers, so the doctors asked if Duane’s organs can be used to help others. Eric’s anger still isn’t enough to stop his world from crumbling…

A year passes and Eric decides to take up donor services on their offer to connect him with those who received a new lease on life because of Duane. Out of high school a year, and still in a fog of grief, replaying the Navy recruiting video, but never having the strength to carry through, Eric needs to know that something good came out of Duane’s accident.

Donor Services arranges for 3 recipients of Duane’s organs to join Eric for high tea at a fancy Boston hotel – teenaged Phil who can hear at last with Duane’s earbones, young mother Melinda whose new kidney will allow her to see her son grow up, and brash Barry who seems to be using Duane’s liver as a cocktail strainer. They’re nice people (except Barry), and they really enjoy hearing about the adventures that Eric shared with his big brother, telling him that if he wants to stay in touch, they do too.

Duane’s on-again-off-again girlfriend, who left the country to volunteer overseas just before the accident, is back in town, having missed the funeral and the chance to mourn with the family. Meeting the people who now have pieces of Duane sounds like a good idea to her, so suddenly Eric is taking Martha to a birthday for Melinda’s 4-year-old son at Chuck E. Cheese, helping her host a cookout at her apartment for Phil and his mom, trying not to gag when Barry flirts with her over sangria.

How are these people related to him, now that they are part-Duane?
Can’t his parents understand that meeting them would help them heal, too?
Now where does he go in life without Duane?

Walking the long road of grief recovery gets a little easier for Eric with new friends and expanded possibilities in this follow-up to Iceman,  Lynch’s first novel about the brothers.  (One of 6,000 books recommended on www.abookandahug.com) Review copy and cover image courtesy of the publisher.