Hold Still

Hold Still

by
4.04 of 5 stars 4.04  ·  rating details  ·  7,475 ratings  ·  873 reviews
I am a girl ready to explode into nothing.

That night Ingrid told Caitlin, I'll go wherever you go. But by dawn, Ingrid was dead and Caitlin was alone. Suddenly Caitlin has to deal with a completely unfamiliar life—a life without the art, the laughter, the music, and the joy she shared with her best friend. When she finds the journal Ingrid left behind, Caitlin gets a chanc...more
Paperback, 231 pages
Published 2010 by Speak/Penguin Group (first published September 25th 2009)

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Reynje
”You might be looking for reasons but there are no reasons.”

It was this simple line that made me realise that I not only liked, but respected this book.

Out of context, it is an ambiguous, awkwardly phrased sentence that makes my fingers itch to shove in some punctuation. In context, it’s one of the most powerful statements in the entire novel. It’s a deeply insightful expression of understanding, an extension of empathy, distilled into one potent line.

Mental illness is not a choice. And had thi...more
Aly (Fantasy4eva)
I love the cover! *pets book* Isn't it just gorgeous? ;)

I think I had such a good feeling about this book for such a long period of time, that I was bound to be disappointed in some way or the other. Don't worry, though. It had some very redeemable qualities.

The premise.

Caitlin's best friend, Ingrid, committed suicide. The thing is, the two were pretty much inseparable. Both were exceptional at photography, and it was this talent of theirs which I enjoyed being explored in the novel. Their pass...more
Janina
This was the third book I read about suicide in a short amount of time (and the second in a row), and it was the one that touched me most on an emotional level. Nevertheless, I think I’ll now move on to some lighter topics ;). I can only take that much …

Hold Still is a quiet, but noteworthy book. It tells the story of Caitlin, whose best friend Ingrid commits suicide. The only thing she leaves behind for Caitlin is her last journal, with drawings and entries that speak of depression, loneliness...more
Keertana
If the breathtaking cover of Hold Still hasn’t already captured your attention, the beautiful writing inside certainly will. LaCour’s debut is an ambitious piece, taking on grief, confusion, and the swirling unknown of despair that leads to teenage suicide. While I can’t say that this is an easy read, because the sadness in it is practically overwhelming, it is a very well-written and powerful novel, one that every lover of moving prose, three-dimensional characters, and realistic approaches sho...more
Linna
Stories about suicide aren’t the type that I’d pick up right off the bat– it can feel like I’m just being manipulated if the plot is nothing but grief and pain. And so when I saw HOLD STILL sitting on the YA shelf of the library, I glanced at it briefly before putting it back down. Which was a mistake, because this book is beautifully written and achingly gorgeous, and the ultimate message (I hesitate on calling it a ‘message’, because you don’t just come across messages in real life, and Caitli...more
Ashlee Tidwell
August 2010 - I'm not sure there are words to express just how much this book changed me. If there are words, they are too personal to share. This wasn't just a book to me, it was a lifeline I wasn't aware I was in need of, a way of understanding things I hadn't quite considered before. I started this book with a much different approach than I came out with, but I say that in the best way possible. Most reviews go on to tell you about the book, but you can read that for yourself. These reviews a...more
Lea (YA Book Queen)
When I first picked up Hold Still, I wasn't sure what to think. I knew this was going to be a sad story, but it's also laced with humor, love, and everything in between. This is one of those novels that tugged at my heartstrings, and captured my attention fully.

I found myself really connecting with Caitlin. LaCour's development of her was amazing, because I honestly felt she could be a real person. She's up, and she's down while dealing with the aftermath of Ingrid's death. The discovery of Ingr...more
Emily  Eponine
This book was very sad, but it was also a very satisfying read. The main character is believable, and real. You feel everything that she goes through. You never do meet the deceased best friend, Ingrid, but from her journal entries, you can feel how broken she was. This is a very important book and I believe that it should actually be taught in schools.
♥ Sarah
description

The book was broken up into different seasons: summer, fall, winter, spring, & summer, again. There were cutesy drawings and pages from Ingrid's journal with these bubbly, floral, cute hipster designs on them. The writing was subtle; the character development was slow, but steady. But it was honestly so heartbreaking and beautiful and true and haunting at the same time. I wanted to laugh one minute, then break down and just sob.

Nowadays, I guess there's more YA literature regarding mental il...more
Charlie
"I am not a darling. I am a girl ready to explode into nothing."


Among all books I've read that involved suicide, I consider this book as the best. Unlike others that seem to talk about why the person committed suicide and sometimes ends up playing a bit of guilt-trip among those who were left. This talks about Caitlin and what she went through on her way to acceptance about her best friend, Ingrid's death.

Caitlin is a very realistic character with real emotions. When her best friend died, of...more
Stefanie
I feel like I've read a lot of suicide books now. Books where the main character is dealing with the aftermath of a loved one's act of committing suicide. And, ya know, the thing I think that draws me to these books is that it's such a real and raw affect that the author creates. I feel like it's a feeling you can't fake. I love the authenticity of that.
Hold Still was no different. The tone was so real, so not forced. Caitlin felt normal to me. She felt like...like how she should when you lose y...more
elissa
Jan 06, 2010 elissa rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommended to elissa by: Capitol Choices
Beautiful. Both simple and complex, if that makes any sense. Definitely a new writer to watch. Reminds me a little of the writing in Zarr's first book. More like 4 1/2 stars, but I'm rounding up. I love how the gay character is just a character, and not at all an "issue" in this book. The author is gay, and she did an excellent job with that part of it. I see this book's biggest strength as showing just how profoundly different what you see on the outside of a person and what's going on on the i...more
Nicole
Dec 29, 2011 Nicole rated it 4 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: anyone 14 plus...though probably mostly for girls
Shelves: ya, lgbt-etc
This book was a surprise. A good surprise.



Don't be fooled by its emo cover and "sexy" suicide subject matter. This book has depth. Though it doesn't dwell on the morbid slit wrist details, it doesn't shy away from them either. The emphasis is on the practical and emotional repercussions of losing your best friend unexpectedly. Walking through the halls, making new friends, laughing and then feeling guilty for laughing. Caitlin is depressed for most of the book but the writing is such that her de...more
Nomes
I got this after reading oh-so-many stunning reviews. And it's one of my fave reads this year.

I am most astounded with just how deeply I sunk into these pages. Nina LaCour knows teens and she's pitch prefect at capturing them.

I personally not only related to Caitlin, but also to Ingrid (who, wow, she's dead from the outset, but her presence is so keenly felt throughout the pages).

It's beautiful and hopeful and brave and captivating and I wish I could go back to my teen self and give her this b...more
Lisa
Cover: 3.5/5

The cover of my copy of Hold Still, just confuses me. Why does the girl look like she's moving, if the book is called "Hold Still"? Maybe, if she were in the process of letting go, it would make more sense. I would really prefer the hardback instead. I feel that it fits the story a lot better!

Characters-

Favorite:

My favorite character would have to be Dylan, hands down, no question about it. She just seems like someone you could trust, depend and lean on when you need her; she knows e...more
T. Greenwood
This is a story about a particular kind of grief, set in the aftermath of a suicide. Pretty grim subject matter, I know. But LaCour's handling of it is deft. The novel is wonderfully raw and authentic, without ever becoming maudlin.

After Ingrid kills herself, her best friend, Caitlin, is left with a few precious (and dangerous) artifacts: a diary, and the photos that Ingrid, an aspiring photographer, left behind. And by studying these entries and images, Caitlin comes to understand everything s...more
Jessica Hill
This quickly became one of my favorite novels. I love LaCour's writing. She doesn't overload it with a ton of details, but gets more to the emotion of the moment. At any given moment, you know exactly how Caitlin is feeling, how hard she's struggling to come to terms with her life without Ingrid, how she feels guilty for not being able to help her friend.

There are a lot of things that people hide beneath the surface and keep to themselves, and HOLD STILL really explores that. Ingrid had all thes...more
Elizabeth
This debut book for this author is AMAZING. Caitlin loses her best friend Ingrid. (they are in high school) Caitlin is grieving very hard and we journey with her as she comes to terms with her grief. Her parents take her on a trip in the summer to help her start to heal. When they get home her father leaves a pile of plywood in the backyard for her to build something which will give her a challenge and renewed purpose. Caitlin finds Ingrid's journal under her own bed and as she reads it, little...more
Katherine Marple
Caitlin is working through the grief of losing her best friend Ingrid to suicide. She finds Ingrid's journal hidden beneath her bed. She is surprised, anxious, afraid, mostly clinging to the idea that she has one more way of holding onto Ingrid's memory within the journal's pages. So she reads it slowly, savoring every entry.

High school is hard. Teenaged years are very difficult. Without difficulties in our teenaged years, we wouldn't have the strength to get through the rest of our lives- adult...more
Melissa Foley
"Hold Still" is book about how one teenager, Caitlin, copes with the loss of her friend Ingrid, after learning Ingrid had committed suicide. Following the incident Caitlin discovers Ingrids journal full of entries that Ingrid wrote to Cailin before her death. This story is about loss and how one girl uses art to help her heal from such a devastating loss.

Ages 14 and up.


This story is a good read for any teenager who has experienced the death of a loved one or who knows a friend who has. Through C...more
Alexis Lee
So I dived right into Hold Still without really knowing what to expect or what was coming. I was anticipating a rainy-afternoon read; something rambly and vague, maybe a bit like Kephart's Small Damages - beautifully descriptive, sincere, but not very deep.

Boy, was I wrong.

I really didn't expect this depth of feeling, this amount of rawness and this amount of understanding of grief and guilt. Caitlin feels, and I was right next to her, feeling lost, guilty, angry, hopeful, bitter, lonely, scare...more
Kyle Ames
Kyle Ames
Contemporary-Realistic Fiction
The story is about a young girl named Caitlin. A few months before the actual story time frame, Caitlin's best friend, Ingrid, killed herself. During the end of summer break and the beggining of the school year, Caitlin discovers Ingrids journal under bed, assuming Ingrid left it there before taking her life she begins reading the entries and surveys the artistic illustrations Ingird drew and wrote about pertaining to her life and depression and even to th...more
Ariel Uppstrom
This book was amazing! I'd had it on my shelf a long time and finally picked it up and read it within 3 days. The story follows a HS junior whose best friend killed herself at the end of the school year their 10th grade year. It goes back and forth between the current year and the year before. The main character, Caitlin, struggles with how she could have missed the signs and then discovers Ingrid's (the girl who died) journal stuffed under Caitlin's bed. As she reads, she discovers new understa...more
Jenni French
Caitlin is starting her junior year of high school still reeling from her best friend's suicide only months before. She finds Ingrid's diary under her bed and enters into her friend's world, trying to understand why she would choose death instead of life. Dylan, a new girl at school, befriends Caitlin and tries to pull her out of her depression and bring healing to her grieving heart.

This was an interesting book, but not a fast-moving one. Grief cannot be rushed, and this book takes its time as...more
Lisa
Heart-wrenching, poignant and captivating. Hold Still is a novel that starts with heartbreak and guides us along Caitlin's healing process. While at times this novel was difficult to read, it was also beautiful exploring Caitlin's and Ingrid's relationship and how Caitlin deals with being left behind. It was such a raw novel and Nina LaCour made you go through the spectrum of emotions never expecting what was going to happen next.

I can't imagine being Caitlin. She's lost and confused after Ingr...more
Lumpenprole
Given that the life and times of adolescent girls is a topic upon which I could speak with no more authority than I could upon Albanian poetry, perhaps this brief review not only pushes the envelope of presumptuousness, it blows through it, reaches escape velocity and ascends out of any sort of attachment to gravity into a vast vacuum of nonsense and ignorance. Perhaps, but this being the Internet I can strut proudly in perfect anonymity, like a Canada goose on a golf course, head held high, hon...more
Brian Kelley
Recent­ly, I bought the entire col­lec­tion of nov­els from Pen­guin's pub­lish­ing wing enti­tled "Point of View" --these are nov­els deal­ing head-on with top­ics many peo­ple find dif­fi­cult to discuss. Hav­ing just read and reviewed Thir­teen Rea­sons Why, I picked up Nina La Cour's Hold Still yes­ter­day and could not put it down (I fin­ished it in two sit­tings)--both of the nov­els I read in the last 48 hours explore teen suicide. I am work­ing my way through these nov­els a few at a tim...more
Misty Baker
“Hold Still” is a very unorthodox book. It’s not really all that happy, it’s got chapters of self-deprecation, and several very emotionally damaging messages from a suicidal girl. Now, keeping that in mind, I want to first explain to you my reasons for reading it, I’ll close with reasons I think you should or shouldn’t read it yourself.

Like Caitlin (the main character of this book) I had a friend whom commit suicide in High School, only I handled in horribly. I shut down, I talked to no one, I c...more
Abigail Creson
Hold still
Hold still is about a girl named Caitlin who lost her Bestfriend to suicide and isn’t sure why or what happened at first till she finds her Bestfriend Ingrids journal.
Caitlin lost her bestfriend Ingrid to suicide no one knew why or what she was going through. Caitlin found Ingrids journal . As time goes by she reads a little at a time. The effect of her bestfriends death takes a toll on Caitlin she feels alone and like no one will ever understand what shes going through untill she me...more
Anna
I know most of us haven't experienced a loss of someone very close to us, especially a best friend. But now I get understand how it feels like if ever that situation happens. It may be sad for a very long time, it may be very difficult to cope up with, but I think at some point there's this realization that everything doesn't stop there, but instead it gives you a chance and hope to keep moving forward.

That is what Hold Still is all about. This book talks about Ingrid's suicide and how Caitlin...more
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Hold Still (Hardcover)
Hold Still (Paperback)
Hold Still (Kindle Edition)
Ich werde immer da sein, wo du auch bist
Hold Still (ebook)

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Nina LaCour grew up in the San Francisco Bay Area. Her first job was at fourteen in an independent bookstore, and she has since worked in two others. She has tutored and taught in various places, from a juvenile hall to a private college. She now teaches English at an independent high school.

Of Hold Still, Nina says:

“This book is about loss, and it’s also about art. The loss part comes from a clas...more
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“The sun stopped shining for me is all. The whole story is: I am sad. I am sad all the time and the sadness is so heavy that I can't get away from it. Not ever.” 393 people liked it
“I don't want to hurt you or anybody so please forget about me. Just try. Find yourself a better friend.” 262 people liked it
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