Ratings19
Average rating4.4
Pretty hard topics addressed in this book and I think they were all touched on well.
Beautiful story with a main character who grows immensely, discovering so many things about herself. Being someone with a similar upbringing and character, this novel was painful to read at times but also showed me that we are not alone in the darkness, no matter what the shadows might try to say.
Es una historia muy tierna aunque dura y difícil como la vida misma. Le he cogido tanto cariño a Kiko, que no quería que se terminara el libro. Me ha recordado un poco a The Bluest Eye de Toni Morrison y a Cat Eye de Margaret Atwood.
Wow. The relationship between Kiko and her mom is very like the relationship I had with mine when I was a teen, with the exception that I came to the revelation that I didn't need my mom's approval a few years earlier than Kiko—and my mom doesn't intentionally upset people for fun. I saw my mom's mind games plainly illustrated in the words of this book.
As with most contemporaries I've been reading, this book was very mixed for me. It was very different and unique from a lot of contemporaries I've read. It took a lot of the same tropes and things from this genre and made them unique and interesting and personal. The anxiety representation was also spot on and so fantastic. It was so genuine and accurate, and I also really appreciated how Jamie would get annoyed and frustrated. In books, the love interest is always this super tolerant guy who makes the heroine's panic attacks so much easier, but his frustration with Kiko was much more realistic and I loved that. Kiko had a very beautiful, if not predictable, character arc and her growth was great to watch unfold. Despite the fact that I haven't gone through the same specific things as Kiko, I really identified and connected with her. However, the actual plot was the same unrealistic and cliche bit where teenagers can just pick up and leave and do what they want without supervision and its very tiring to keep seeing something that could never really happen. I definitely had to suspend my disbelief with a lot of the events of this book. Sometimes the writing was really beautiful and other times it felt like the ramblings of an angsty teenager without any sort of style. I also wish that the friendship with Jamie had been explored more because we're just told how perfect they are for each other without ever really seeing it.
This book paralyzed me, because I didn't know how to write a review for something that moved me so deeply. I sat on my couch and cried every time I opened it. Cried not because I was sad, but because I saw myself in this book and Akemi Dawn Bowman wrote it EXACTLY HOW IT IS, to live this way, and she articulates it - something I've never been able to do clearly, even to people I trust and count my closest friends. I think I am lucky enough to have a few friends who understand me anyway, but to explain why I act the way I do or feel the way I feel...nope. Because of this book, I think I finally have something of an idea - or at least a better idea - of how HUGE of a deal representation is in books. Huge. HUGE. I've always SAID I believed it was important, but I didn't really know how it FELT.Kiko is half-Japanese, half white. The biracial rep is actually why I picked this book up - not because I myself am biracial, but because I was trying to find another book to read for the January challenge! Kiko also has moderate-severe social anxiety, and lives with a psychologically and emotionally abusive, narcissistic mother.Ding ding, on both of those.At first I couldn't believe what I was reading. I kept telling my husband, “I swear, I think the author met my mother and decided to write her into a book!” And then I started to cry because someone understood not only having a mother like that, but having overwhelming panic at the thought of going places or meeting people.Normal people don't need to prepare for social interactions. Normal people don't panic at the sight of strangers. Normal people don't want to cry because the plan they've processed in their head is suddenly not the plan that's going to happen.SO MUCH THIS. So much. Also, Kiko sits outside of a party in her car for about 20 minutes before she can convince herself to go in - and in the end her friend comes outside to go back in with her anyway. Been there, done that. Social functions are HARD. They're terrifying, and exhausting. I have a very, very distinct memory of arranging to have dinner with a friend (myself and my husband), and showing up at the restaurant to discover he had invited about 5 other people. I nearly blacked out standing next to the table, and I fought tears for several minutes after my husband helped me sit down. I can only imagine what those other people must have thought of me - but Kiko knows exactly what that is like.Kiko's mother is psychologically and emotionally abusive. She is white, has bi-racial children (biological even), and yet she is incredibly racist. She constantly makes Kiko feel ugly and worthless. She lies to her about events in the past, she demeans her childrens' heritage. She must be the center of attention at all times, and she must look perfect to the world outside. And Kiko - as every child does - craves her mother's approval and support. Even when she knows it would be better to cut her mom out of her life, even when it would be healthier for her not to engage - she does. Because somewhere deep inside, there is still a tiny, tiny hope that one day her mom will be supportive and unconditionally loving.Ding ding, again.I was so happy to see Kiko finally get to embrace herself. Her ethnicity, her art, her personality. And to find friends who loved and accepted her for who she is, and who could celebrate ALL of her, with her. Also people who understood how poisonous her mother was.“All that time growing up, I thought I was the only one who could see. I thought nobody understood the way he was. I thought I was the problem. But some people are just starfish - they need everyone to fill the roles that they assign. They need the world to sit around them, pointing at them and validating their feelings. But you can't spend your life trying to make a starfish happy, because no matter what you do, it will never be enough.”Please go read this book. Whether you identify with Kiko somehow, or if you like art (Kiko is an amazing artist and the book has some beautiful descriptions of her paintings and drawings...also check out the fan art competition). Just please read. Even if you don't see yourself in it, I guarantee you someone in your life or acquaintance DOES.Blog Twitter Bloglovin Instagram Google+
This is a book I really wish my younger self could have read. There are so many deep, important subjects here that I feel are covered in a healthy, realistic way. Kiko is a biracial girl living in an overwhelmingly-white town who finds herself dealing with the intersection of several different issues: racism (both from her classmates and her white mother), abuse (both emotional and sexual), and mental illness (severe social anxiety).
I felt that Akemi's portrayal of sexual assault and social anxiety were both spot-on. Of course, everyone's experiences are different, but I really saw my own reflected here, which made me feel understood and validated. My one issue being that both Kiko and her friends tended to joke about and/or accuse her abusive mother of being bipolar or narcissistic. It was definitely a bummer to see an author attempt to destigmatize one form of mental illness while at the same time continuing to stigmatize others.
I loved pretty much everything else about this book. I found myself hooked into the plot right from the beginning. In short, I loved this book and I cannot recommend it enough. I'm so glad that I got my hands on a copy and I really can't wait to see what Akemi puts out next.