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Showing posts with label religion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label religion. Show all posts
Isadore took everything from Michael. She was vicious, brutal, and unrelenting. In her wake she left Michael friendless and orphaned. That is how he came to live with his paternal grandmother in the small rainy town in the Northwestern US rather than in sunny Arizona or balmy Florida. After the hurricane killed everyone on the scuba-diving boat trip, Michael didn't have anything left. He kept his dive log and used it as a type of therapeutic journal when Isadore became too much for him to bear.

Until he meets quiet, enigmatic, Mormon Leesie (dubbed The Ice Queen by fellow classmates), Michael thought he might need to give in to what Isadore told him. He finds himself drawn to Leesie's presence despite her very strike moral and religious guidelines. At first it appears that they won't work out due to his volatile nature as a result of his grief. He's trying to overcome something that seems insurmountable and Leesie wants to help him, both spiritually and emotionally. They spend all their free time together, despite what they are hiding form one another. In the end, their secrets may be too great for them to bare alone. Can they manage to rescue each other before one of them is gone?

Taken by Storm is not only told in alternating voice, but by multiple means. When it's Michael's turn, we're reading his entries in his dive log. They tell so much and yet not always enough. He's very clipped and refers to himself as "i" rather than "I" insinuating that he is less important that others. When Leesie is narrating, she speaks in either a chat log with Michael or her poetry critique partner or uses her actual poetry to convey action. Her work is very literal with less symbolism than one encounters during English class, but there is still rhythm and measure to it. It was very pleasing.

The religious aspect of this book added a whole other dimension that I enjoy authors exploring openly. Leesie is like a lot of girls, both religious and not, who are abstaining from physical intimacy (of most kinds) and is trying to do the morally appropriate things in all situations. Naturally, Michael plays the sinner attempting to be saved by this girl, but really it's deeper than that. She's not necessarily concerned with saving his immortal soul and converting him, but really she just wants to open his mind to other ways of thinking. A very unique experience I must say.

Overall though, there was very little real action and sometimes the dialogue left something to be desired. At least 50 pages could have been cut out since it was just repetitive arguments between the main characters over how far they could go and what his parents' deaths mean to him. It was kind of hard to read through those moments, but I felt satisfied at the end of this novel. The ending especially gave me a huge boost. I felt that it was very telling and very fitting this particular situation. Give this book a chance and stick with it. If you find the characters appealing at all, you should enjoy this novel.

This book was provided by International Book Tours.

Taken by Storm by Angela Morrison

Waiting on Wednesday recognizes that we as bookies pine for books. This post is about what I am impatiently waiting for right now. It was started by Jill at Breaking the Spine.

This week's selection is Saving Maddie by Varian Johnson with an anticipated release date March 9, 2010.

Joshua Wynn is a preacher’s son and a “good boy” who always does the right thing. Until Maddie comes back to town. Maddie is the daughter of the former associate pastor of Joshua’s church, and his childhood crush. Now Maddie is all grown up, gorgeous—and troubled. She wears provocative clothes to church, cusses, drinks, and fools around with older men. Joshua’s ears burn just listening to the things she did to get kicked out of boarding school, and her own home.

As time goes on, Josh goes against his parents and his own better instincts to keep Maddie from completely capsizing. Along the way, he begins to question his own rigid understanding of God and whether, as his mother says, a girl like Maddie is beyond redemption. Maddie leads Josh further astray than any girl ever has . . . but is there a way to reconcile his love for her and his love for his life in the church?

From Goodreads

How incredibly interesting does that sound?! I tend to enjoy YA books which contain religious/spiritual growth for the teens characters as I think it is a key element to maturity. One must turn inward and face oneself before dealing with the outside world. Both Maddie and Josh contain a lot of potential that I am hoping will be well-rewarded. What are you impatiently awaiting?

Waiting on Wednesday: Saving Maddie