Monday, April 28, 2014

Close Your Eyes, Hold Hands - reviewed by Maggie Devero



Close Your Eyes, Hold Hands by Chris Bohjalian
Reviewed by Maggie Devero

When your whole world comes crashing down around you, can you ever find the will to live on?

Emily Shepard is on her second to last day of junior year at Reddington Academy, when the school receives some devastating news -- the nuclear power plant called Reactor One, located on Cape Abenaki in the Northern Kingdom, had exploded and caused a radiation blow to the entire area. Now known as the Exclusion Zone, with radiation levels unfit for an living being, has left Emily homeless and orphaned, with her parents being the main directors of the plant and obviously killed in the explosion. Instead of seeking the help that would have reached out to her at the time, she chooses to avoid the general public who blames her parents for coming to work inebriated and causing this problem, and lives on the streets. She takes on the alias Abby Bliss, friend of her idol Emily Dickinson, and roams the streets taking up stealing and some others destructive habits. She struggles between survival and suicide...that is until she meets Cameron, a nine year old runaway who gives her a reason to live for.

I did in fact, like this book very much. Emily was the most accurately portrayed teenage girl in a disastrous situation, unlike characters in the many other YA books I've read before. Her panic and struggle, the solace she finds in the poetry and life of Emily Dickinson was very relatable to the reader,  and the sisterly love she gives to Cameron is one of the most endearing aspects of the story. Even so, she still makes mistakes like a human being (leaving Cameron while he's sick, doing drugs, cutting) which enhances the realistic aspects of her character. How Bohjalian depicts the setting gets you right there on the streets with Emily, in her garbage bag igloo. Beautiful wording, and accurate usage of modern social networks brings the story up to date, and puts you right in it. It was an amazingly written novel, and even without the perfectly happy ending it's an enjoyable read. Five out of five stars.

3 comments:

TheBookNurse said...

I read this as an ebook ARC in March and posted a review of it on my own blog:
http://thebooknurse.blogspot.com/
at that time. Please visit and comment there!

Thanks to author Chris Bohjalian and Doubleday Publishing, I was able to obtain an ARC for my library science students to review! What a great opportunity to interact. THANK YOU ALL.

Jack Dimarco said...

Very nice description of the book, sounds interesting!

-Jack Dimarco

Anonymous said...

I thought this was an interesting read. I did think that it was how almost any teen would act in that kind of a situation. It did take me a while to really get into the book though.