I said "yes" to reviewing Blue because I thought the premise of a made-up world coming true was interesting...
Title: Blue
Author: Lou Aronica
ISBN-13: 9781936558001
Paperback: 394 pages
Publisher: The Fiction Studio, 2011
Purchase at IndieBound, Amazon, The Book Depository
Source: The Fiction Studio
drey's thoughts:
Blue is not quite what I expected. Here's why: I expected more of a children's story (imagination, magic, made-up world, etc), and I got a poignant tale of a father and daughter reconnecting with each other via a pretend-world that they conjured up when she was going through a life-threatening illness...
Character: Chris is a sad character, and one I didn't know how to connect with. I could see the why of where he's at, but that's about it. I expected a bit more emotion from this scientist father, but I suppose not everybody could be just as I expect... Becky, I could get. She's plucky and funny and smart, even at just fourteen... She's also trying to navigate the waters of post-divorce parental interactions, crushing on the cutest boy at school, and not worrying that her nosebleeds are the pre-cursor to her leukemia's return. Then she finds out that Tamarisk, the world she and her dad created, is real. And so are the people and creatures she imagined into being all those years ago... Now there's something threatening that beautiful world, and she's made it her mission to try and figure out how to fix it.
Pace & Plot: Blue started off a little slowly, going back and forth between real-life (Chris & Becky), Tamarisk (Miea), and some in-between place where Gage muses... I still don't quite get Gage, but oh well. Once Becky re-discovers Tamarisk, things start moving quickly, as she attempts to help Miea figure out the blight that's plaguing the kingdom. This is where Blue is at its most descriptive, with the fantastical flora and fauna, the riot of colors, and those who people this kingdom... The ending isn't a surprise, but the journey there is worth the read.
drey's rating: 3/5 Good: Pick this one up for an emotional read on a cold winter's day.
2011 Challenge: New Author
Have you read Blue? What did you think?
This does sound like an emotional book. I'll have to remember that it starts slow if I get the chance to read it.
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