Review: Keeping the Moon by Sarah Dessen

I am not sure how to feel about this book.

I started my Dessen adventures with Just Listen, which I loved. I then proceeded to read Dessen’s other stories out of order; going back to her older work. I found that the farther back I went the heavier the More You Know hand weighed down on my shoulders. The books aren’t terrible (has she ever written a bad book?) but they’re lacking a spark that I found in Just Listen and The Truth About Forever. There’s a depth that’s missing from her earlier work that her more recent work has in spades. Even Lock and Key had it and I didn’t particularly care for that story; it was trying too hard. There are layers to Dessen’s later work that feel more true to life. It wasn’t a bunch of episodic events that related to each other enough to tangle them together into a cohesive story. I don’t feel that Dessen is pulling archetypes and standard high school scenarios out any longer. She’s graduated beyond the building blocks and now she’s into Tinker Toys, to abuse a metaphor. You can build cooler stuff that people can recognize as yours right off the bat.

I went into the story annoyed at the tone. I worked this out with KJ, who eventually pinned my problems with the opening sequence where Kiki Sparks is sending Colie away to stay with her eccentric sister Mira while she tours around Europe promoting her fitness line. She advises Colie to eat the pre-planned meals she’s sending along because it would be a shame to gain all that weight she lost back.

What’s the biggest shame is that line of dialogue. Awesome: Colie’s mother is a weight-obsessed jerk! It set the tone for the entire story in the gutter for me. Right off the bat Colie and her mother are characterized by their weight and defined by how they live their lives around it to escape the “fat years” as if being fat is equal to being miserable and lonely and avoided, period, no way around it. I know it’s hard to find books that don’t treat fat girls and women like they’re some sort of alien from the planet Lard, but I swear it’s possible. Keeping the Moon isn’t actively hostile to heavy characters, but it wasn’t too kind, either. Colie was the fat girl with no friends and no self-esteem because she was fat. Those negative feelings followed her as she lost the weight, too—true enough to life, but I’m still bothered. Being fat means you don’t have self-esteem? Being fat means you learn to hide behind the rolls and the thick thighs? Being fat means you’ll only gain the confidence you need once your mother finds her religion in fitness and molds you to where you’re “supposed to” be?

I would have enjoyed this book more had Colie not lost the weight, truth be told. I’m tired of the fat-girl-becomes-a-swan-and-is-reborn! story. I want stories where the fat girl doesn’t have to change her exterior. I want stories where there’s more focus on being healthy and making better choices instead of “I was a fat kid and lost 45 pounds!”. These stupid numbers. Who cares about them. Being heavy doesn’t mean unhealthy or weird or freakish and this book aligns them so often, especially in Mira’s case, that I just don’t know how to feel. Mira’s part in this novel: the fat aunt who has a thing for cats and pack-rat behavior. Most of her cameos in this novel leave her weight as the biggest and most important issue, even after it’s ceased to be a problem for Colie.

Both of Colie’s best moments happen because boys paid her attention—the new her, not the old her. The new Colie, who is not fat anymore and will no longer be a pushover finds her voice and sees herself…through boys. It felt like the novel was telling me that if she hadn’t lost the weight she would still be holding on to a negative self-image and therefore never have the nerve to approach either of the kids as equals. Once again, I am left bemused and wondering what the hell this book is trying to tell me. WHAT ARE YOU SAYING, DESSEN? That the negative self-image is caused by the weight? Because I’m fat and I still have self-esteem. I don’t let people treat me like crap. You don’t have to be thin to demand respect from people: it has nothing to do with weight.

The sisters were the best developed and that might not be a compliment. It was another ugly-duckling-to-swan story: yawn. Another Days of Our Lives flavored plot point: predictable. Norman was a non-entity and also, I might be tired of the sensitive artist love-interest type. The romance and conflict around it felt shoved in at the last second, whereas a friendship would have felt more true to where Colie was at the time.

All in all I wish I had started reading Dessen’s books when she first started writing. Her stories of the past are cobbled together. I don’t want to knock it too much: I do it myself with my own writing because I’m learning, but also I’m not published yet, either. Ira Glass talks about this: how we create and we can see that although we’re making something to the best of our ability, it’s not where it should be yet. There’s a gap. This Lullaby was the line in Dessen’s work where she finally walked into her own voice with an ability and experience to create really well-rounded characters that weren’t predictable and flat, but rich and human, and scenarios that were the same.

That said, now I’m going to go eat some ice cream.

Other reviews (did I miss yours?):

None!

 
Waiting on Wednesday (1) – I have to have this book, guys. HAVE TO.

Oh, a meme, started by someone (who?).

I am waiting on the book John Green mentioned months and months ago (which might as well be forever in book time) where he said he was writing a book with David Levithan about two guys with the same name. Something was mentioned about intersections and how paths cross, etc. etc. blah blah. The truth is when I heard they were writing together I’m not convinced my brain didn’t liquefy from the amount of awesome contained in the mere concept.

I don’t enjoy much of Levithan’s solo work. It leaves me bemused (Boy Meets Boy) or actively annoyed (Wide Awake). However, the work he does with Rachel Cohn is awesome. Everyone else is more crazy about Nick and Norah but I still prefer Naomi and Ely. Could this be because the first book is about getting together and the second is about letting go? In my experience people will choose the book with the happy ending and Naomi and Ely is bittersweet. I’m destined to be on the fringes of every single fandom.

Back on the topic: I am waiting on this Green/Levithan collaboration, which exists! I swear! It has no cover to look at. This interview suggests the title is Will Grayson, Will Grayson, but titles can change. It exists as a vague statement on John’s journal and mentioned in some video or blogTV event. Technically, I have no idea what this book is about and shouldn’t be googling it constantly for news, but…whatever! It’s John Green and David Levithan which means even if it’s bad that suggests that it’s just okay.

I have to have it. *flails*

 
Review: The Body of Christopher Creed by Carol Plum-ucci

This post now lives on subverting the text.

 
insert something about thanking the academy here; Weekly Geeks

I thought after the holidays were over life was supposed to get less hectic. I have not yet seen evidence of this strange occurrence called “calm” and am doubting its existence.

In the meantime, Tarie gave me an award, which was super nice of her. Thank you!

*

 

I have gotten awards before for my other journal, but hilariously enough, I love being awesome! livejournal culture isn’t one where you can go balls out and be self-congratulatory about your journal unless you’ve just posted a few thousand words of fanfic where boys make out. It’s odd to accept this, in other words, and post it, because I feel like a conceited jerk. It’s as if instead of tooting my own horn I’ve hired an entire brass section to play one long note for as long as they can before running out of air. Sweet! I can get behind this, my ego is already there, swelling to sizes never before encountered by the eyes of modern humanity. Thanks again, Tarie!

This award is timely because it’s the first edition of the new Weekly Geeks, where we talk about which blogs we think are cool and so if any of these blogs below are into awards they can totally claim this. It’s all here in writing and I can’t deny it if I happen to meet anyone on the street (because I’m so sure everyone’s going to be walking around rural Arkansas ksdhfklff;;;).

Blogger That Makes Me Snort Liquids Out of My Nose: Raych, books i done read. She gets the most disgusting award for making me laugh so hard especially when I am drinking liquids. You would think I would take this as a sign to only read her RSS feed when all glasses, cans, bottles and straws are far, far away, and yet! AND YET, there have been repeated incidents in which liquids that I will not name here have come straight out of my nose even with me perfectly aware that she will drop hilarious comments or turns of phrase right into the middle of any review. I may like her, but my sinuses probably have other ideas.

I Might Be Stalking Them. You Know, Maybe. Chris, Stuff as Dreams are Made on. I met Chris way back when Weekly Geeks first started, back before I had this blog, around the time when Herding Cats was making me rethink challenges as a fun events and consider them a risk to my sanity. Out of all the non-YA book bloggers I follow, he’s the one that I get most of my recommendations from. In his favorite books of 2008 post alone, I ended up with four new books on my reading list. Another plus is that he likes to type things that are long and I am always clamoring for more and longer blog posts from my favorite bloggers. A+, guys. A+.

The Secret Assassin Blog, Where By “Secret Assassin” I Mean “Dangerous To Reading Piles Everywhere”: Nymeth, things mean a lot. NYMETH. STOP MAKING ME WANT TO READ EVERYTHING OKAY. I can’t afford this habit! You keep making me want to throw books on this pile! I live in a small apartment! My to be read list is already at 365. It’s like you have some kind of nefarious power to compel people. HELP.

I’m just kidding please don’t leave me.

Sharp Verbal Knives Never Looked So Shiny and Tempting: Steph, Reviewer X. All I have to say is, if you’re not reading Steph’s journal, chock full of YA goodness and things like Girl Week and YA Connection and hilarious reviews, I question your awesome levels. I’m not going to say anything outright; I’m just suggesting that, you know, maybe if you are missing this YA book blog powerhouse your life is a little less rich, your snark quotas empty. I’m just throwing it out there. There’s not even a scale that can measure Steph’s awesome levels. I’m pretty sure I heard a rumor she’s destroyed like five of those scales since she started blogging. You know, on those grapevines. Who knows if it’s true. I’m just saying.

The end for now!

This is why I am afraid of lists like this; I could go on and on and on, but it’s 1A.M. and I have things to do, reviews to tag (no one really wants to know how many reviews are in my backlog), book carnivals to compile, books to read so this will do for now. I really do recommend all the YA blogs I follow; they are all pretty awesome.

 
I’m used to being the pariah because of tl;dr; why not embrace it?

Ira and I are co-reviewing The Disreputable History of Frankie Landau-Banks, which everyone should read in order to not be STRUCK FROM MY HEART FOREVER, and although it’s going to be about 10,000 words long and no one but us will read it, I am pleased and happy. We summed it up nicely:

Renay: WHAT ARE YOU SAYING, LOCKHART
Ira: This the recurring theme of our co-review. WHAT ARE YOU SAYING HERE

 
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