Archive for October, 2025

Invisible Son by Kim Johnson

Genre: Realistic Fiction

After spending two months in a juvenile detention center for something he was innocent of, Andre Jackson returns home to find that nothing is the same as he left it. His family is treating him differently, especially his dad who is always so busy at his bookstore that he didn’t even come home to have dinner with Andre the first night he was home. His best friend has mysteriously run away, but no one seems to know where he is including his sister, Sierra, which Andre finds suspicious. His parole officer seems to be on his side, but there is another parole officer who definitely has it out for him and is frequently tracking him when he has no business watching him. Andre just assumed that everyone would who knows and loves him would know he would never have anything to do with any robbery, but he’s surprised to find that people seem unsure and wary of him now that he’s back. To make matters worse, he arrives home just in time for the onset of Covid 19 and that causes several problems as his family is one of the first to get it and his mom is a hospital nurse. Plus, Covid keeps him from reentering school, which is desperately wants to do. As they struggle through this terrible pandemic, Andre does spend some time with Sierra and her adoptive family that lives across the street. Sierra’s adoptive father has been especially helpful with Andre’s situation and even helped provide a lawyer for him. However, Andre suspects he knows more about his best friend’s disappearance and isn’t saying a word. Who can Andre trust? Will his family make it through the pandemic and everything that comes along with it? Will that parole officer try to pin more robberies on him and send him back to jail?

This book really makes the reader feel like they are in Andre’s shoes. It is written so that you can feel his frustration with his situation, his concern over his missing friend, his sadness over what Covid is doing to his family, and his mixed emotions toward the girl next door. It’s easy to identify with Andre’s emotions because everyone reading this now has experience with the pandemic and how that changed everything, but then you throw on everything else Andre is dealing with and it’s a very powerful narrative. The ending is both exciting and satisfying as Andre tries to find out what happened to his friend and clear his name. The ending is also believable in that not everything ends perfectly for everyone. The author did a fantastic job of conveying the many thoughts and feelings of a young person going through a very stressful time. Highly Recommended.

The Singular Life of Aria Patel by Samira Ahmed

Genre: Fantasy

Aria Patel loves to study science because it is precise and predictable. Therefore, she is confused when her physics teacher gives the class a poem to study about different realities. More confusing still, is when she begins getting terrible headaches and proceeds to start waking up in different realities for herself. In each reality she lives in a different place, her family looks different, and even her interests seem to vary. However, that poem from her class and the boy, Rohan, she recently broke up with appear in each reality. As she desperately tries to get back to the life she knows she ends up staying in one reality for longer and begins to really fall in love with the family and Rohan she has in this reality, but as attached as she is getting she knows she does not belong here and must find her way back. Can she get back to the world she knows, even if it is not the most perfect universe of herself? Will she ever learn how she is sliding between realities? Will she ever find her way back to her beloved Rohan?

This book is interesting and fast paced as Aria’s reality changes so quickly. It becomes clear that she needed to see these different realities in order to give herself some perspective rather than only focusing her life on things that are probable or predictable. There are many things in life that do not always make sense, but feel right anyway. Aria needs to learn to focus on more than just the science behind everything. The ending is satisfying, but does not explain everything and might leave readers wanting a little more closure but that is really the point.

After Life by Gayle Forman

Genre: Realistic Fiction

One day Amber rides her bike home from school feeling like it’s any other day, but when her mom sees her she starts screaming because Amber died seven years prior in a hit and run. Amber does not remember anything about the accident and hasn’t aged at all, but everyone around her has moved on including her sister, Melissa. Melissa is Amber’s younger sister, but now she’s officially older than Amber ever was. Strangely, Melissa is the one person who does not seem that surprised by Amber’s appearance and seems genuinely pleased to see her despite the fact that Amber was very mean to her when she was alive. Amber’s father, who was never religious, has declared her appearance a miracle and wants to tell everyone, but Amber’s mother is scared of what is happening and does not want to get her hopes up. As Amber comes to terms with the fact that she was never able to do any of the things she dreamed of with her life, she also learns that many unfortunate things have happened since her death, including her parents’ separation. Why is Amber back now? Is there any way she can resume her life, even if in a different way? Can she find closure with those she left behind? Will she ever find out who hit her and ran away to leave her to die in the street?

This story really makes you think about life and how to make the most of it. Amber thought she had time to do all the things she wanted with her life and she also thought she had time to fix her relationship with her sister. Amber also struggles watching how much her family has suffered, but seeing her does bring them some peace and the strength to make some changes in their lives instead of being forever burdened by her untimely death. Forgiveness is a major theme in this story and most readers will connect with one of the characters because they are all justified in their feelings but also need to find ways to forgive and move forward. Recommended for anyone dealing with a loss, but everyone will find themselves thinking about the characters even after the story is done.


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