Society

Deep Sky

Deep Sky

by Yume Kitasei

Deep Sky by Yume Kitasei book coverIn my Instagram (@eveslistofficial) short video, I summarized this book as a hybrid between Harry Potter’s training in Hogwarts and competition and comradery of Hunger Games, two of my favorite series, all set in space. Here’s a deep dive into the Deep Sky: 

I never thought I was a fan of space until I read this book. The combination of paranoia, deception, and the ever-lasting search for acceptance made a great theme for this science-fiction. The story follows our main character, Asuka, a girl who has been recruited onto a mission to start a new life on a new planet called Planet X. The first chapter takes off with Asuka being asked to do a spacewalk to investigate a strange object on the side of the spaceship. As she comes closer, there’s an explosion. Just a few months after waking up from ten years of sleep, three people are dead, and Asuka is going to find out who is the traitor. Throughout the book, our perspectives on Asuka change as we see flashbacks up to ten years before takeoff. These little pieces of Asuka’s life let us observe her as a changing girl and learn some things that actually help Asuka in the end.

One of the things I loved about this book was how engaging the plot was. The turn of events kept my eyes glued to the page. Whenever they accused someone new, I was left on the edge of suspense as I kept reading, trying to figure out if they’re really the culprits. When Luis, Asuka’s brother, died, the author was subtly hinting that he had drowned while playing with his virtual reality. That set Asuka’s goal clear; she was going to space for Luis.

I think that this book is for young adults, like me, mainly because Asuka starts training for the program at twelve, and we get to see her grow up throughout the book. I was a little bit disappointed in the fact that we didn’t really see much character growth in Asuka until the very last few chapters of the book. She had the same attitude leaving her mother for the training as she did ten years later leaving for outer space. That was why when I first started reading the book, I kept on thinking that Asuka was 12 in space when she was actually 22, but technically 32 because of the decade long hibernation they did.

I also liked this book because it gave insights into the many struggles of interracial kids. Asuka wanted to find a balance between both nationalities (American and Japanese) but her mom’s enduring attitude to wanting her to be more Japanese made the relationship between them even  more distant. We learned that Asuka appreciates Japanese culture, but being able to speak very little Japanese and having only lived in Japan for a year, she felt out of place when meeting the other Japanese candidates.

There was a reason I’ve always been not too fond of space: the risks you had to take. The space wheel in this book was knocked off course and everyone was set for a life wandering in vacuum until death. But, Asuka took a risk and told everyone to blow an explosive on the other side, to straighten the ship back up again. I realized you had to take risks, and if you’re trained well enough to do them, you will most likely succeed. It’s better to try and stay alive than to accept your fate. I recommend this book because I had such a fun time reading it, and I hope you will too. 

Posted by Hellen in Books, Reviews, 0 comments
The Outsiders

The Outsiders

by S. E. Hinton

The Outsiders by SE Hinton book cover

The Outsiders by S. E. Hinton is about the rivalry between two groups on opposite ends in the spectrum of wealth. Ponyboy, our narrator, leads us through two weeks of his life where he contemplates the difference between right and wrong in society. The Greasers, which he is a part of, is a poverty stricken group of boys ranging from adolescents to young adults in age. The Socials or the “Socs”, are a generalization of the wealthy teenagers living on the other side of town.

When the rumor spreads that Ponyboy and Johnny were with girl Socs, the girls’ boyfriends decide to take revenge.They pull up to Ponyboy and start beating him and his friend up, but Johnny had a pocket knife and accidentally killed someone. They run away and deliberate whether or not they should turn themselves in. 

I really liked how many meanings this book could take on. Since I read this with my class as an assignment (which was one of the few I enjoyed), we had to analyze and explain what the theme or moral of the story was. When it was time to share, each of us (there’s around 30) had different answers, some following the same path, while some were in another destination. For example, I said that innocence will eventually leave our worlds as we grow older. My friend, Meher, said that you should enjoy things in life when you experience them, referring to Johnny’s regret.

Hinton’s style of writing was also very intriguing. For example, in the beginning, you think that this was a narrative (it is) presently spoken but in the end, it’s revealed that this was a thesis book thingamabob Ponyboy wrote for English. I liked how the beginning and end end with the same phrase, showing that mistakes and events can happen again, but what changes is your perception of it.

I also liked how she included a poem from  Robert Frost that gives this book its overall distinguished motif. “Nothing Gold Can Stay” is about how special the season of spring is and how even special things can’t stay forever. This can take on many meanings as well.

I would recommend this book to young adults, but older people can still enjoy it. In the movie based on this book, it had many actors who are very famous now and lets you see where they started and how much they’ve improved.

Posted by cutiecupcake1288 in Books, Reviews, 0 comments
The Girl Who Fell from the Sky

The Girl Who Fell from the Sky

by Heidi W. Durrow

The Girl Who Fell from the Sky by Heidi W. Durrow is about a girl who has survived from an attempted suicide and starts a new life. Rachel is starting 6th grade at her new school, in a new town with her grandma. The book’s narrator switches between the main characters, Brick and Rachel. Rachel is a very light skinned brown person who is very smart but people still make fun of her because they are jealous of her beauty and her intelligence.

I liked how in the end of the book, Rachel tells us what her mother’s last words were, and it solves the mystery that was lingering throughout the book. I felt satisfied when they revealed the answer so I wouldn’t have to keep on worrying about why something happened. When Rachel was eleven years old her mother, Nella, killed herself by jumping from the roof of their apartment building. Nella pushed her son, Robbie, to his death and held her baby, Ariel, in her arms as she jumped. 

The book was a bit confusing since they kept on switching between characters, and sometimes you forget the narrator changed which changes how you read it. If you sometimes keep on reading, thinking it’s the same character, and the plot doesn’t make sense. It’s confusing because if this character was just in Texas, how did they end up in Australia? I wish there was more differentiation between the characters’ voice and style of narration to make the transition more obvious. 

The plot of the story was very exciting. The story was very original, and there were many mysteries waiting to be solved. As I was writing about this book, I found out that the story of the suicide was based on a true story, of a mom who couldn’t bear seeing her children suffer. It made me feel sad, because the baby who died was less than a year old, and I felt that they should’ve lived longer to experience the wonders of the world.

Posted by Hellen in Books, Reviews, 0 comments