Showing posts with label Harmonic Feedback. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Harmonic Feedback. Show all posts

May 14, 2010

Harmonic Feedback - Tara Kelly





Young Adult
Pages: 288
Publisher: Henry Holt and Co. (BYR)
Release Date: May 25, 2010

Sixteen-year-old music and sound-design obsessed Drea doesn’t have friends. She has, as she’s often reminded, issues. Drea’s mom and a rotating band of psychiatrists have settled on “a touch of Asperger’s.” Having just moved to the latest in a string of new towns, Drea meets two other outsiders. And Naomi and Justin seem to actually like Drea. The three of them form a trip-hop band after an impromptu jam session. Justin swiftly challenges not only Drea’s preference for Poe over Black Lab but also her perceived inability to connect with another person. Justin, against all odds, may even like like Drea. It’s obvious that Drea can’t hide behind her sound equipment anymore. But just when she’s found not one but two true friends, can she stand to lose one of them?

This is one of the reasons I don't like to read summaries very much. I try my best to avoid them. I wish this one in particular didn't say so much.

With that said, what a pleasant surprise was this book. I'm entrapped and mesmerized at how basic and yet surprising was the psychological part of the book. As you know the female lead character, Drea has been diagnosed with certain mental disadvantages that make her, in some ways, socially awkward. Except I ended up feeling more awkward than her. This book will make you evaluate and analyze your daily social interactions. The questions and difficulties that Drea faces that are simply everyday things to most of us. Wouldn't we all love such an honest world? I now wish everyone was real and sincere like Drea is.

The book has an amazing premise. A plot that with slight changes might be even boring and predictable, Kelly's writing and concepts about society make it utterly unforgettable. Plus, the characters might step out of the book while you're reading, so be careful. That's how real they are. Of course, I fell in love with Naomi like we all will, but Drea and Justin and all secondary characters were just as amazing. I can surely say that this book changed me, and my mental scheme of implied society rules. I don't think I will ever prejudge anyone by their appearance again, ever. I hope I don't at least. I apologize if I wrote "amazing" too many times, but that happens when you really like a book! Oh, and it's probably my favorite book title ever!


May 6, 2010

Author Guest Review (1) - Tara Kelly

I had this crazy idea of hearing what YA authors have to say about other YA books, specially Unsung YA (as in: not so commercially-popular titles). What better recommendation than one from our beloved authors, right? So I will be doing Author Guest Reviews for books I've really loved.

Harmonic Feedback
This is the first author review and the idea was not totally mine, I saw a great Harmonic Feedback review by Ballads of Suburbia's author Stephanie Kuehnert at Nikki's blog YA Reads a while back (See it here). So one day I was chatting about books with Tara Kelly (Harmonic Feedback's awesome debut author) she mentioned how much she loved this amazing book and I decided she should be my first guest and talk about it. The book was:

By the Time You Read This, I'll Be Dead by Julie Anne Peters
(Goodreads / Amazon)

Tara's thoughts:

I can count on one hand the books that have made me tear up. I'm a very tough reader--it's hard to get an emotional reaction out of me. By The Time You Read This, I'll Be Dead by Julie Anne Peters grabbed me by the throat and didn't let go until the last page. This book gives readers an unapologetic view into the mind of a bullied teen, making it a difficult but unforgettable read that will haunt readers long after putting it down.

By The Time You Read This, I'll Be DeadDaelyn has been bullied about her weight since Kindergarten. She remembers every single name she was called. Every incident that happened in vivid detail. To quote Daelyn herself: "I don't know why I can't let the insults go, but I can't. I'm the product of every hurt that's ever been laid on me. Human waste product. Dispose of it." (p 27) After a couple failed suicide attempts, she's desperate to get it right this time. Turn the light out for good. She begins visiting a pro-suicide website called Through The Light where she shares her painful experiences and suicide plans. And her plan is set in stone--right down to the exact day.

Enter Santana. Not the band. The persistent boy who sits with her every day after school. Despite her best efforts to push him away, he slowly burrows his way into her shell and shows her a completely different point of view--one she can't seem to ignore.

While I wasn't suicidal, I was bullied in school--and reading Daelyn's experiences brought back a lot of my own painful memories. Like Daelyn, my experiences played in my head for years--to the point where I made myself invisible and kept everyone at arms length. Peters' portrayal of how bullying affects one's self esteem is painfully realistic and heartbreaking. That being said, there were times I wanted to shake Daelyn and tell her to grow a pair. Fight back. But I also understood that--from her perspective--there was no hope. Life would never get better. In a sense, her meticulously planned suicide was an attempt to gain control over her life. Peters didn't shy away from this to make Daelyn more 'likable' so to speak. She chose the realistic route--and I commend her for that.

I'm just glad hope arrived in the form of Santana--who is probably one of my favorite boy characters of all time. He's unique, funny, charming, and perfectly flawed. I can't think of a more perfect match for Daelyn. Even if their connection wasn't romantic, he's just the friend she needed.

While some may call this book 'too dark', I think it's important that we see just how far bullying can push people. How absolutely destructive and life altering it can be for the person being tormented. And I also think it's important that teen readers--who may be in a dark place themselves--see that there is hope and there are people out there who will understand them. They just may not be the people they'd expect or WANT to understand them.

I highly recommend this book to anyone who wants a gripping read that will hit them right in the gut. But I'll warn you of two things--keep a box of Kleenex nearby and prepare to have a mega-crush on Santana.
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Thank you SO much Tara!! I, too, absolutely LOVED this book. See my review of By The Time You Read This, I'll Be Dead here. Check out Tara's book Harmonic Feedback that will be available on May 25th, and my review of it coming next week. Hint: LOVE!