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A review by jaxyway
The Here and Now by Ann Brashares
2.0
Reviewed on my blog, www.bibliobrat.com.
Decent concept, bad execution. Make no mistake – this is not a dystopian novel. It is based on an apocalyptic event, yes, but one that was only referenced in a handful of pages in the entire novel. Yes, the heroine and her people came from a dystopian setting, but the book takes place in 2014. This is a time travel novel. (Not a very good one.)
I’ve never read anything by this author before, and have no interest in the Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants books, but she has skill, for sure. Unfortunately, I think time travel is a little out of her comfort zone. The parts of the novel where the heroine remembers the past (the plague that ended the world as she knew it) were actually decent. If this book was just about that plague, it would have been better.
So in this book, a thousand people from the future (around year 2090) find a way to travel through time and leave their devastated world. But they have rules, and they will be drowned to death if they disobey them. So they can’t have close personal relationship with the “time natives”, and are forbidden on doing a bunch of other stuff which is fading from my mind like a bad dream as I type this. So Prenna can’t fall in love with Ethan or there will be consequences. Like there wouldn’t already be devastating consequences from a thousand people taking up permanent residence in the past that they don’t belong in, but right, a committee in their system is going to micro-manage high school relationships. They have time for that shit.
Also – this story would have worked better as a trilogy, or hell, even a longer book, so that we could have taken the time to get to know the characters. If the reader would have had a chance to fall in love with the hero instead of just being told that the heroine loved him, we could have forgiven weak secondary characters or a plot riddled with holes if you think about it too much. Maybe. But no chance with the lack of character development we were given.
Two stars, because it started off decent enough, and despite inconsistencies, I read it quickly and it kept my interest. The more I think of it in retrospect, though, the more I realize that it just wasn’t very good.
I was invited by the publisher, Random House Children's, courtesy of Netgalley, to receive a free copy of this novel in exchange for my honest review.
Decent concept, bad execution. Make no mistake – this is not a dystopian novel. It is based on an apocalyptic event, yes, but one that was only referenced in a handful of pages in the entire novel. Yes, the heroine and her people came from a dystopian setting, but the book takes place in 2014. This is a time travel novel. (Not a very good one.)
I’ve never read anything by this author before, and have no interest in the Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants books, but she has skill, for sure. Unfortunately, I think time travel is a little out of her comfort zone. The parts of the novel where the heroine remembers the past (the plague that ended the world as she knew it) were actually decent. If this book was just about that plague, it would have been better.
So in this book, a thousand people from the future (around year 2090) find a way to travel through time and leave their devastated world. But they have rules, and they will be drowned to death if they disobey them. So they can’t have close personal relationship with the “time natives”, and are forbidden on doing a bunch of other stuff which is fading from my mind like a bad dream as I type this. So Prenna can’t fall in love with Ethan or there will be consequences. Like there wouldn’t already be devastating consequences from a thousand people taking up permanent residence in the past that they don’t belong in, but right, a committee in their system is going to micro-manage high school relationships. They have time for that shit.
Also – this story would have worked better as a trilogy, or hell, even a longer book, so that we could have taken the time to get to know the characters. If the reader would have had a chance to fall in love with the hero instead of just being told that the heroine loved him, we could have forgiven weak secondary characters or a plot riddled with holes if you think about it too much. Maybe. But no chance with the lack of character development we were given.
Two stars, because it started off decent enough, and despite inconsistencies, I read it quickly and it kept my interest. The more I think of it in retrospect, though, the more I realize that it just wasn’t very good.
I was invited by the publisher, Random House Children's, courtesy of Netgalley, to receive a free copy of this novel in exchange for my honest review.