
From
YA Highway:
Road Trip Wednesday is a ‘Blog Carnival,’ where YA Highway's
contributors post a weekly writing- or reading-related question to write
about on our own blogs. You can hop from destination to destination
and get everybody's unique take on the topic.
This week's topic:
What was the best book you read in July?
July, July, what happened to July? And I'd thought June had flown by. Before you know it, summer will be gone, the kids will be back in school. The proof? My son received his teacher assignment on Saturday! My goal for August: slow down time, spend more of it playing with the kids and less on the computer, see Coldplay (in 10 days - whoop!), take a mini-vacation to CLOUD 9 Country. Can't wait!
Reading in July was sluggish, with a lot of false starts.
Easily the best book of July was SECOND CHANCE SUMMER by Morgan Matson.
Taylor Edwards’ family
might not be the closest-knit—everyone is a little too busy and
overscheduled—but for the most part, they get along just fine. Then
Taylor’s dad gets devastating news, and her parents decide that the
family will spend one last summer all together at their old lake house
in the Pocono Mountains.
Crammed into a place much smaller and more
rustic than they are used to, they begin to get to know each other
again. And Taylor discovers that the people she thought she had left
behind haven’t actually gone anywhere. Her former best friend is still
around, as is her first boyfriend…and he’s much cuter at seventeen than
he was at twelve.
As the summer progresses and the Edwards become
more of a family, they’re more aware than ever that they’re battling a
ticking clock. Sometimes, though, there is just enough time to get a
second chance—with family, with friends, and with love.
Oh, this is my kind of book, with all the things I love: summer, the lake, family drama, first love.
I recently had a conversation with one of my critique partners, Kari, about seasons in our writing. She's more of a new beginnings writer, the start of the school year. Of my four novels, three of them take place during the summer.
Summer is not my favorite season, but I have fond memories of childhood summers, and I'm drawn to those experiences. Every summer we met up with family on my dad's side for a week at a cabin on the Whitefish chain of lakes in Pequot Lakes, Minnesota (
CLOUD 9 Country). We had parties, played Scrabble, went fishing, sunbathed, shopped. There was golf and water-skiing and mini-golf and bumper cars (although I only participated in half of those. You guess which ones).
I love the sunshine and blue sky of summer. I love thunderstorms and the green sky aftermath of severe weather. I love the smell of zucchini on the stove and burgers on the grill. I love sunning myself on a floatie in my sister's pool, early morning reading or writing on my front porch before the brutal heat of the day kicks in. If it weren't for that heat and, even worse, the humidity, I might love summer. But I don't love summer. I love the idea of summer and aspects of summer and writing about summer. I love books that capture the experience of summer. And I loved SECOND CHANCE SUMMER.
Morgan Matson handled this topic with respect and honesty. It's a beautiful, heart-wrenching story. From the first page, I was rooting for Taylor and wanted her to find a
way to patch things up with Lucy and Henry. Mostly, though, I wanted
her to connect with her dad before it was too late.
There were moments in this book that brought tears to my eyes and then, toward the end, the tears spilled over. My five-year-old daughter touched my shoulder at one point and said, "Mom, are you crying?"
I nodded.
"Well, just skip that page," she said.
In life, you can't just skip the page.
I lost my dad to cancer nearly six years ago, and many of the emotions in this book were familiar and raw. My situation was quite different from Taylor's, decades of difference. I was a grown-up, pregnant with my second child, my father was 75, had raised seven children, and had lived a good, long life. But that doesn't make losing a parent any easier. Like Taylor, there were many moments during my father's nine-month battle with lung cancer that I wanted to run away, pretend it wasn't happening.
It happened. Life -- and death -- happens. You can't skip the page. Imagine what you might miss. Even amongst all the pain, you might miss something beautiful.
Tell me, what was your Best Book of July? Are you drawn to books (or do you write them) set in one season over another?