We all have that friend. You know the one. Super fun, a little wacky, would do anything for you, might get you to do something you wouldn't otherwise do... They make great book characters! I like to think of these sorts of characters as the catalysts to the great chemical reaction that becomes a fabulous book.
BOOM! Enter Ana-- she storms through your bedroom door, or crashes through a puddle splashing you both, or slams into you as you both excitedly round the hallway corner in search of one another. Friendships with Ana demand attention.
We all have the other friend. You know the one. Lovely, but quiet. Dreaming, but reserved. You never quite know what she thinks about something; she's too nice to be cruel, and too modest to gush. Friendships with Katie are felt, not heard. They're spent and enjoyed, no demands or stipulations. She is necessary and you know it most when she's not there. She is reliable, steady, the constant.
The best books pair these two friends together. Great literature, cinema, and even real honest-to-goodness history are filled with great pairs of women, young and old, who realize just how much they enjoy and combine to complement one another. Stronger together, better combined, balanced out.
When I guide my students or daughter towards books with females of variety, I'll show them Paper Chains. This novel is anything but sappy sweet girly sleepover fluff. We're talking adoption, divorce, deception, danger, injury, disaster, depression. Don't let the precious cover fool you. The pages turn themselves. Full of other characters, round with complexity themselves, and plot tangles that resemble the links of the paper chain itself, it's a pretty perfect read.
I love that the setting time is those magical weeks between Thanksgiving and Christmas; those days when the whole world glitters and surprises find us. I'm so excited to have received this in ARC form before it's release on October 17, 2017. It was an honor, and I wish these girls all the best as they tell a wonderful story to the world this fall.
It's worth noting that talented author Elaine Vickers is actually a science professor, something I DIDN'T EVEN REALIZE WHEN I MADE MY EARLIER ANALOGY TO CHEMISTRY! How cool is that?! Soooo, do you, um, like, do extra credit? (LOL, jk. Teacher joke, #firstweekofschool)