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Matt has been sleepwalking through life while seeking answers about his brother T.J.'s death in Iraq, but after discovering that he may not have known his brother as well as he thought he did, Matt is able to stand up to his father, honor T.J.'s memory, and take charge of his own life.
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This here is one book you can't possibly give any details about because anything at all would be a spoiler. Needless to say this is going to be one hard review to write.
Matt has a lot going on. It's like the understatement of the year. He lives with his scary father who keeps pushing him to enlist after graduation, his older brother T.J. was blown to bits in Iraq about 6 months prior, he's crushing hard on his best friend, his grades are non-existent, and he is angry... really angry.
A series of events occur that lead Matt to want to know more about his brother while he was a soldier on duty. When T.J.'s lockers are delivered to their home, Matt does everything possible to keep a piece of his brother with him while doing right by his memory.
I was definitely impressed with the writing in the sense that you feel every bit of angst that is sent your way. It was incredibly real. It didn't matter whether it was Matt or another character speaking at the time, you just knew exactly what that person was feeling and why, no questions asked. I honestly couldn't put this book down. I had to know what was coming next. Let me tell you, this book is definitely NOT predictable. You won't see anything coming and that too was impressive. Many props to the author. She pieced everything together in such a way that it unfolded seamlessly leaving you with a jaw dropping WHAT THE HECK just happened kind of look on your face one minute and a jaw dropping WHAT NOW look a minute after.
THE ONLY problem I had with the book was the use of some language that just seemed out of character for Matt and it really felt like a slap in the face. I literally felt the slap. Weird, I know. The words were U.G.L.Y. I can understand his initial shock that led to these ugly words AND he later had a change of heart, however, he never voiced how wrong he was to use those words or how ashamed he felt using/thinking those words. I needed to feel that resentment. I needed the reader to know that it wasn't cool at all to think that way. Eh... It's only my opinion but as a mom who would like to recommend this read to her kid, I'd like a book this powerful and possibly influential to ensure that words like that are definitely not ok.
Overall, this is a great read. I didn't feel happy at the end of this book. I felt sad. The book doesn't have a true happily ever after but it didn't need to because like in real life some things are just a work in progress. Matt does walk away a stronger person with a plan to live happier and I couldn't help but feel hope and love for this kid.
A week later, I'm still trying to process all of the thoughts and emotions this great read has provoked.
ARC provided by Candlewick Press via NetGalley.