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Summary
Summary
Acclaimed writer Margo Rabb's Kissing in America is "a wonderful novel about friendship, love, travel, life, hope, poetry, intelligence, and the inner lives of girls," raves internationally bestselling author Elizabeth Gilbert (Eat, Pray, Love).
In the two years since her father died, sixteen-year-old Eva has found comfort in reading romance novels--118 of them, to be exact--to dull the pain of her loss that's still so present. Her romantic fantasies become a reality when she meets Will, who can relate to Eva's grief. Unfortunately, after Eva falls head-over-heels for him, he picks up and moves to California with barely any warning. Not wanting to lose the only person who has been able to pull her out of sadness--and, perhaps, her first shot at real love--Eva and her best friend, Annie, concoct a plan to travel to the west coast. As they road trip across America, Eva and Annie confront the complex truth about love.
In this honest and emotional journey that National Book Award Finalist Sara Zarr calls "gorgeous, funny, and joyous," readers will experience the highs of infatuation and the lows of heartache as Eva contends with love in all of its forms.
Since publication, this novel received 4 starred reviews and has been named:
A Chicago Public Library Best Teen Book of 2015 A New York Public Library Best Book for Teens 2015 A Miami Herald Best Book of the Year A Spirit of Texas selection A TAYSHAS High School Reading List Selection An Oprah Summer Reading List selection A Junior Library Guild selection An Amazon Best Book of the Month A Publisher's Lunch 2015 Buzz Book for Young AdultsReviews (6)
School Library Journal Review
Gr 9 Up-Two years ago, Eva Roth's father was killed in a plane crash, which is still being investigated. Eva's grief is as fresh as it was the day he died, but her mother seems determined to move on and expects Eva to do the same. As her mother becomes increasingly uncommunicative and obsessed with work, Eva tries to escape her pain by focusing on preparing for college; studying with her best friend, Annie; and losing herself in the pages of romance novels. When the teen is paired with high school heartthrob, Will, in an after-school tutoring session, she discovers that he, too, has lost a family member. Their shared understanding of loss and pain draws them into a relationship that is abruptly halted when Will has to move from New York to Los Angeles. Following the advice of her favorite romance novelist, Eva determines to find a way to go "get her man." She convinces the brilliant Annie to enter the two of them in an academic teen game show that promises a trip to Los Angeles and a $20,000 scholarship to the winner. Together they embark on a cross-country adventure that will test their friendship, and ultimately bring Eva to a deeper understanding of herself and her family. With a full cast of multidimensional characters, this novel explores the complex nature of relationships and the many faces of grief and love with equal parts humor and poignancy. VERDICT A first purchase for most YA collections.-Cary Frostick, formerly at Mary Riley Styles Public Library, Falls Church, VA (c) Copyright 2015. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Publisher's Weekly Review
In this indelible coming-of-age story, Rabb (Cures for Heartbreak) seamlessly weaves together multiple narratives: families coping with death, immigrants determined to make it in America, the power of education to transform lives, reality TV offering a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity, first love, first heartbreak, and the conflicted, ardent passion of a mother/daughter relationship. After Eva's father dies in a plane crash, she lives with an awareness that "the very worst thing you imagine, your biggest fear, does happen," a fear she mitigates by avidly reading romance fiction. Eva's mother, a women's studies professor, disparages the books, but for 16-year-old Eva, "those feelings felt as real and true as any other feelings I'd ever felt. As real and true as grief." A cross-country bus trip expands Eva's world as she and her best friend Annie encounter people who "never met a Jewish person before" and discover that "real-life cowboys were better than fictional ones." Sprinkled with the poetry Eva reads and writes, this story makes for a hilarious, thought-provoking, wrenching, and joyful quest. Ages 14-up. Agent: Emily van Beek, Folio Literary Management. (May) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Horn Book Review
Eva Roths first rebellious act against her protective, feminist mother is to fall in love with romance novels, and her second is to fall in love with Will, whom she meets in her Bronx charter schools tutoring center. She gradually opens up to him, even telling him about her fathers death in a plane crash, a much-needed catharsis since her mother avoids the subject altogether. When Will moves to Los Angeles at the end of the school year (and says goodbye with lots of kisses), Eva ropes her studious best friend Annie into a cross-country bus trip: Annie will compete on the lucrative Smartest Girl in America television show, while Eva will serve as Annies companion, eligible to help her with questions and earn prizes of her own. (As far as Evas mother knows, the game show, not Will, is the only motivation for the trip.) The books title covers only one aspect of the story; the lineup of friends and meddling relatives the girls stay with on their road trip adds humor and depth beyond the romance plot. Ultimately, this often entertainingly snarky novel gives Eva some closure on her fathers death and a chance to repair and renew some of her living relationships. shoshana flax (c) Copyright 2015. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Kirkus Review
Best friends leave New York City for the first time and take a transformative road trip to Los Angeles. Sixteen-year-old Eva Roth's penchant for reading romance novels (118 at last count) is termed "your ultimate rebellion" by her mom, a women's studies professor. Eva is a poet, and she used to write alongside her beloved father, but when he died in a plane crash two years earlier, she stopped writing. Rabb eloquently gets grief right in this compassionate, perceptive, and poignant story, deftly leavened with irreverent humor, of a girl in conflict with her mother. Poems by Elizabeth Bishop, Emily Dickinson, Adrienne Rich, Nikki Giovanni, Marie Howe, and others are so beautifully integrated into the first-person narrative that the poetry comes alive. Eva's burgeoning, heart-stopping relationship with senior Will Freeman initially helps her begin to find a way out of grief, as does her smart, empathetic best friend, Annie Kim, with whom she can share the absurdity of it all. But Will unexpectedly moves to California, and with Annie's participation, Eva comes up with a truly creative road-trip planone in which America, land of endless possibilities, serves as a backdrop for unexpected love. And love is really what this remarkable story is all about. Wise, inspiring, and ultimately upliftingnot to be missed. (Fiction. 14 up) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Review
*Starred Review* One kiss. That's all it took for 16-year-old Eva's fantasy world of poetry and romance novels to become real. Sharing the grief of her father's plane-crash death and her mother's refusal to mourn with Will makes the memories and frustrations less harsh because, just as her romances promise, love conquers all. Until Will unexpectedly moves to California. How to see Will again? Have brilliant best friend Annie enter the Smartest Girl in America contest, be her companion lifeline, travel to L.A. to the competition and just happen to see Will in the process. Thus begins the girls' rollicking, eye-opening cross-country bus adventure from New York City to Tennessee, Texas, Arizona, and finally to the competition's TV set in California. This is a smart teen's novel. Poems abound, gracing each section and quoted in special moments and memories. Annie is drop-dead smart, and Will is subtly intelligent and more attuned to the world's harsh realities. But all Rabb's characters are authentic and complex, including the adults who are trying desperately to do the right thing for themselves and the young people around them, sometimes awkwardly and occasionally very badly. Rabb knows the perfect point to interject humor to diffuse a potentially devastating situation and there are many! a leavening of sorts to the reality that death and love inexplicitly alter the landscape of a person's life.--Bradburn, Frances Copyright 2015 Booklist
New York Review of Books Review
You wouldn't be completely remiss in at first assuming that "Kissing in America" is a dishy romance novel like the kind its main character, Eva Roth, reads obsessively. After all, it begins with 16-year-old Eva chronicling her mad crush on "weird and popular" Will Freeman. But from there it takes a sharp turn into tragedy when they reveal to each other their hidden hurts: Eva's adored father died in a plane crash, and Will lost an infant brother to SIDS. Before their relationship can deepen, Will is forced to leave New York and move in with his father in Los Angeles. So Eva and her brainy best friend, Annie, devise a scheme that involves taking a bus across the country to be on a California quiz show. Annie hopes to score a scholarship while Eva just dreams of seeing Will again. Along the way, they meet an idiosyncratic cross section of family and strangers who help Eva put both her grief and her feelings for Will into perspective. In contrast to her cherished romances, there is no guarantee that Eva's journey will have a happy ending - unless she finds a way through her sorrow to make it so. "Real love is a leap," her mother's friend advises. "We never know if there's any ground beneath our feet... But we leap anyway." Rabb's funny and big-hearted second novel is bursting with resonant themes of love, death, family, art and identity, fully embodied in a diverse cast of wonderfully fallible and entertaining characters.