~Invincible Summer: not your typical beach read, indeed. With its unfitting cover and delicate insides, this is a book to be taken seriously, and even if I have some very large issues with what lies at its core, do not mistake my ranting for dislike of the novel.~
This so very could have been one of my favourites. Everything I love about books – great main characters, family dynamics, friendships and “relationships” – was incorporated, tied up with the nice bow of stunning lyrical, minimalistic prose. This book had potential to be something magnificent, but because one thing fell, everything else suffered with it. I couldn’t appreciate the main characters because they were flat, the family dynamics because it was all unexplained, and the relationships and friendships because, well, they weren’t actually friendships or relationships. I recommend Invincible Summer to the more serious reading audience, and I’ve even passed it on to many of my friends, but it still isn’t without its flaws.
Readers get to experience four summers in the life of Chase McGill, his family of seven, and his “summer” friends, these summers existing amongst family drama, two brothers “sharing” a girl, and complicated friendships. Hannah Moskowitz crafts Chase’s narrative with believable sentiments and realistic emotions, and if I could pick something I loved the most about this book, it would be the prose that could be beautiful and warm while just as equally cold, bitter and broken, what basically sums up Invincible Summer in its entirety.
What lacks in IS is the depiction of characterization – the illustrating of the characters was inexistent, even though the characters as wholes were fantastic. Chase was the follower and the little brother and the faithful and loyal, and even though he was emotionally traumatic – sometimes to the extremes – I still felt like I was sitting in an empty cardboard box. I was reading from his POV and it felt like I was doing exactly that - reading his experiences and emotions instead of feeling them. Chase felt disjointed from me, another teller who decides to keep from showing, and unfortunately because I didn’t feel connected to him, I wasn’t able to appreciate and comprehend why certain things were such a big deal, and why some of the people and memories he had were so important.
I thought the way Chase was desperate for his brother’s attention and his pleas for Noah to stay was utmost pathetic because I couldn’t understand why he’d want Noah to stay. Noah was an ass, and because I was never allowed to dig deeper, I couldn’t understand the way the McGill family broke down. Melinda, the catalyst for Chase’s change over the four summers, should have been able to elicit some sympathy from me, but she was so constrained in her I-must-catalyze-Chase’s-Change Container that I wasn’t able to reach out to her. The only characters who I had a certain fondness for were Claudia and Gideon, the former a spunky girl who didn’t get enough page time, the latter a boy after my own heart with his adorable phrases and stubborn, determined attitude. I believe that if I had been able to reach out and feel the pain and confusion and the relationships between the three main characters that this book would have been beautiful through and through.
I have a really BIG issue with the fact that people think this book focuses around a love triangle/a romance. Let me make this crystal clear: it doesn’t in any way, shape, or form, reflect the aspect of falling in love. What it actually reflects is that little thing called lust that most teenagers fall in and out of with popular actors and partners and best friends and people who sit across from them in Spanish. DO NOT MISTAKE THIS BOOK AS TWILIGHT: THE CONTEMPS. IT ISN’T.
Honestly, though, Invincible Summer isn’t a love story and it’s not a love triangle either. I don’t know how someone who has read this book could name it as such. IS– at least the way I thought it through – was more about Chase growing up, and the things that moved him in to doing so (before he was ready) (I’m looking at you, Melinda), rather than which brother was better for Melinda, yaddah yaddah, all that crap. MELINDA AND CHASE WERE NEVER IN LOVE – and it was never implied that they were – so how can one look at it and judge it based on what’s so obviously non-existent. OF COURSE the “love triangle” didn’t work for you, guys! IT WASN’T MEANT TO BE COMPREHENDED AS SUCH!
Invincible Summer is about a boy struggling with a world of grown-ups, where everyone he loves has left for him to chase after. How do I know that? Shannon, for example, has a job in the second summer, is holding down a serious relationship, and is looking at colleges. Claudia is making out with strangers at twelve. Gideon is pushing to learn about the world he’ll never be fully apart of. Noah is going to school and trying to be a man and learning what takes to be one. Bella is pursuing her dreams. Everyone has moved towards a future, and because Melinda and Chase are left behind, they turn to each other – each for their own reasons, some more odd and implausible than others – and try to forget that nobody cares about how they move forward, as long as they do. Chase and Melinda fall into lust, not love, and don’t mistake it. The point of this story was to demonstrate how some people get left behind, and this book is not a romance.
The quoting of Camus was unneeded, and hollow. It didn’t give me any appreciation for the old guy, it didn’t open my eyes to things Moskowitz was trying to present with her characters through the quotes, and it didn’t make me all gooey inside, or make me believe that the characters were smart. It was sort of unbelievable – how are people supposed to remember so many long passages and bring them up in the middle of a conversation? What was detailed and represented well was the way the McGill family worked, even if certain aspects of it – the dependency on Noah, the leniency towards Claudia, the toughness on Gideon – was set askew. I loved everything about the family because they were close and yet too far apart to work out. The McGills were so much like my family, and so much like other families I know, that I fell in love with them as a whole faster than I could with the characters by themselves.
Invincible Summer, with its intricate family dynamic and tangled web of relationships, was well written and heartbreaking. While I had my problems, I had my affections towards the book, too, and I'd tell anyone to read it. I can see how this might be a person's favourite book, and I’m hoping that in the future I’ll be able to call one of Moskowitz’s my own because if anything, she has talent.