Rating: 3.8/5 stars
Okay.
Okay.
Okay.
That's me trying to gather my thoughts about this book. My technical opinion is that I hate the cover, the plot was decent but murky, and we don't know what happened. Mia wasn't as dynamic as I wanted her to be, and her father was written in a way that was unnatural, like the author wanted the audience to go "I hate this guy!" but she didn't disguise it in her writing in a natural way. The plot was a vessel for the bits of wandering thoughts and wisdom interlaced in the text. Also, the tense changed from present to past and vice versa numerous times. It had a cool affect but I'm not sure if it worked.
But the personal part of me, the part who's parents just got divorced, needed this book. I needed someone like me to show me how it's done. And the answer is: It isn't. It's just coped with, it's adapted to. And everyone deals with it differently, and it's okay to get angry or upset, but you need to understand each other.
The philosophical moments made this book rich, and the characters were all so real (except Dad, like I said). I've never felt closer to a character like Mia, and everyone can relate to her perfectly. There was a decent amount of diversity in this that I'm just now realizing.
All in all, this was a beautiful book that kids going through divorce should read. It's so real and raw.
"It means I am not a ghost, a serial-killer, a head-on collision."