Oh my gosh! What shenanigans! :-)

Categories: Non-Romance Reviews: Young Adult • Reviews by Author, L-P • Reviews by Grade: B
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Melissa Marr’s publicist at HarperCollins, also named Melissa, has been gifted with a heaping spoonful of Wisdom Pixie Dust, because after I wrote about the absurdity that was Jane Henderson’s review at the St. Louis Post Dispatch stating that Marr’s novel was a “knock off” of Laurell K. Hamilton, she sent me an ARC of Ink Exchange.
How could I resist the opportunity to find out if indeed Marr’s novel about teens mixed up with faeries outside Pittsburgh does indeed feature over-sexualization of teen girls that may lead to teen pregnancy, or the profound oversexxoring that would lead to a valid comparison of Hamilton’s Merry Gentry series? I couldn’t.
Now that I’ve read the book, I have to say, this book isn’t a knock off of anything I’ve read, unless there’s a giant designer purse made up of meaningful, emotionally wrenching YA storytelling from which this book snatched a tassel. There is no question in my mind that Jane Henderson’s opinion is so wrong, it’s not even in the same county as right.
I loved this book. For me, the fact that her friends didn’t help her only re-enforced the message that the fairies, for all their beauty and power, are not trustworthy creatures. They’re not mortal, and mortal concerns aren’t high on their priorities. (Although Aislinn regrets not trying to warn Leslie about Irial later in the book - it’s still too little, too late.)
No it’s not a traditional romance, but there is something to be said for the reality of a bittersweet ending. And that won’t stop me from hoping things might be resolved in one of the next books.
All in all, I liked this book even a little more than Wicked Lovely.
I read this book yesterday and my feelings were much the same as yours--to me, it’s a book about survival and consent and recovery than it is about anything else. I haven’t read the first book in the series, but I’m quite glad to have read this one.
So essentially, Henderson’s review was definitely right up there with Maxim’s *coughreviewhackcough* of the Black Crowes’ new CD?
In that, “barely skimmed it but I’ll review it anyway” sort of way?
I’ve got Marr’s books on the TBR pile for after I’m done with revisions on my new one. They sound fascinating.
Perhaps if you sent your review to the paper that ran Henderson’s article they would print it? I’d love to see that happen!
A reader asked that I post this comment anonymously on her behalf:
The other aspect that irritated me was that so many of the ancillary characters knew what had happened to Leslie before the novel began, and did nothing. They just knew, and watched her suffer, and did nothing. On one hand, their inaction was somewhat understandable seeing that, faery-involved or not, the protagonists of this series are teenagers, who are not powerful by any stretch, particularly these teenagers who operate largely without sound parental guidance or presence.
...[T]his quote:
On the other hand, even within powerlessness, there is the opportunity to help her, and not one of them took it. I may be picturing my own teenage life through tinted happy glasses but I’d like to think that if I knew a friend had suffered the way Leslie did, I would have found some way to help, or at least let that person know I would help them find safety.
caught my attention.
My sister and I were emotionally, verbally, and physically abused by various stepmothers and sexually abused by our father. The fact that other characters know what is going with Leslie and do nothing does not surprise me and, in fact, strikes me as very realistic.
It may be different now than when I was young, but I think a great many people generally rationalize not getting involved for a great many reasons. Because they don’t want to cause trouble or they don’t want the abuser(s) to get in trouble, for instance. Or because they tell themselves that it isn’t what they think it is or that they are imagining things. I know for a fact that most of my family knew what was going on with the emotional, verbal, and physical abuse because we told them and they talked to my father about it. In fact, my grandmother let me move in with her the last 3 months that I lived at home before going into the Air Force so that my dad could “keep the peace” with my current stepmother. Of course, no one ever did anything about it other than talking, for the most part, even after my sister ended up in a mental facility for 6 months. As for the sexual abuse, two of my stepmothers knew about it, as did my best friend and at least one teacher that I told. Nothing was ever said about it other than my current stepmother telling me that I was a slut.
My best friend was in a similar predicament as her mother was offering her up to “friends”, including a whole summer with one couple on their farm in the middle of nowhere. (She told my friend that she was “old enough to get experience and might as well learn how to do it right--she was 14.) She told the same teacher that I told (it was in the autobiographies that we were assigned to write.) The teacher never mentioned our autobiographies to either of us. I got a B+.
So, in my experience, I don’t think it’s that uncommon for people to know and do nothing.
-Anonymous
She told the same teacher that I told (it was in the autobiographies that we were assigned to write.) The teacher never mentioned our autobiographies to either of us. I got a B+.
Dear Anonymous,
On behalf of teachers everywhere who assign or receive autobiographical writing from students, I’m so sorry! The adults in your lives let you, your sister and your friend down, which in my book is inexcusable.
Fortunately the legal changes in this area, including mandatory reporting standards, are making it easier for authority figures like teachers, doctors, ministers and counselors to do the right thing when dealing with abused children.
As for getting help from peers, that comment in SB Sarah’s review, I may be picturing my own teenage life through tinted happy glasses but I’d like to think that if I knew a friend had suffered the way Leslie did, I would have found some way to help, or at least let that person know I would help them find safety, led me to a very interesting discussion with my own teenage daughter. In her opinion, a real friend would let someone know that she cared and was willing to try to help, but would wait to be asked, because everyone needs to deal with these things in her own way.
I asked my terrific kid how she would go about that, and her response was so typical that I just had to post it:
“hey leslie, look, i know this is a weird thing to just come out and say but i care about you so i’m going to do it: if you ever want me to tell anyone or if you just want me to sit and listen, i’ll do either for you”
Sarah, thanks for highlighting this book and its issues. You done good.
Yeah, but isn’t that why so many of people are looking elsewhere (like here and other online sources), because many of the mainstream critics & reviewers have made themselves irrelevent?
Is it just me, or am I seeing more of these ignorant, bigoted, and poorly read book critics? Why is it that any vampire or fairy book is now considered a knock off of LKH? yesh.
Haven’t read this yet, but Wicked Lovely doesn’t remind me of LKH at all. I’ve stumbled across several knock-offs & wouldn’t consider one to be Melissa Marr.
Fresh out of the oven Brownie Points for Melissa the Publicist; after this review I am definitely going to read both of Marr’s books.
I started reading ahead of my age early, so when it came to reading YA’s I always figured that, “If I can appreciate regular adult books, why should I read books for teens?”
Yeah, I was an idiot.
Then I read your review for “Nick and Norah’s Infinite Playlist”, borrowed it, absolutely loved it, and realized how much I’ve been missing.
So now, at 18, I’m discovering how wonderful of a genre it is. ...Better late than never, right?
Marr sounds like a great author to check out, so Thanks!
03.03.08 at 07:09 AM |