Tuesday, March 29, 2016
Honey and Dream
Bone Gap by Laura Ruby
New York, NY : Balzer + Bray, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers, 2015.
345 p. ; 22 cm.
What a fine and unusual novel this is. In some ways I think I should end my review here and say, "Just read it for yourself, and see."
I read Bone Gap after seeing it come up several times - a finalist for the National Book Award and a Printz Prize winner this year. As you can see on the author's website, the book has received a great deal of high praise - and I'd have to concur. The author both employs - and cleverly does away with - realistic narrative. Several reviews acknowledged "magical realism," but it is more than that - dreamy, psychological and mythical.
I love that the novel is set in a town that actually exists in my home state, and yet it really only exists between the covers of the book. I also appreciate that the novel could well be a lovely little adult novel and not just a young adult novel. It tells the story (stories) of two brothers, the likeable and unlikable characters of the town, a Polish immigrant, a kidnapping, a romance (two romances?) and the magic of love and imagination. What more could you want from a simple, and not so simple, coming of age story.
The novel made me think a bit of Bradbury's Something Wicked This Way Comes, Master's Spoon River Anthology, and even works of GΓΌnter Grass. If you like well written novels, with a touch of romance, mystery, magic and danger, then Bone Gap should definitely be on your to-read list.
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