Publisher's Hardcover ©2017 | -- |
Paperback ©2018 | -- |
Vance and his brother, Oscar, are complete opposites. Vance is one of the most popular guys in school and loves to drink, party, pursue girls, and dominate on the lacrosse field. Conversely, Oscar is happy with his status of being a loner and finds refuge in classical music and drawing. For the past three years of their lives, they have done whatever it takes to avoid each other, but now their father is dying of liver failure due to his excessive drinking, and the two brothers have no choice but to confront their dysfunctional family relationships.
ALA Booklist (Sun Jan 01 00:00:00 CST 2017)The only things brothers Oscar and Vance have in common are a mother, who died in a car crash three years earlier, and an alcoholic father, who is dying of liver failure. Vance, a high-school senior, loves to hang and drink with his dad, and thinks Oscar is a drag. Oscar, a year younger, loves to draw and listen to classical music, but has become withdrawn because his interests are mocked by his family. He sees what alcohol is doing to his father and how his brother is stumbling down the same path. Told in alternating first-person accounts car's in the present and Vance's moving forward from the night their mother died e brothers' stories are frank and honest. The divide between them is clearly drawn, and Walton allows their personal healing to occur organically. There are plenty of teen novels in which parents die; however, this is a cut above as its main characters must struggle through loss twice and navigate decisions normally consigned to adults.
Kirkus ReviewsTwo brothers watch over their father during his last days while looking toward an uncertain future.When Oscar and Vance's father gets in a car accident, the doctors discover that his alcoholism is destroying his liver and warn him that he must stop drinking. But he doesn't, and now his sons, both white, are staying near his bedside at the hospice to make sure they're with him when he dies. Artistic, quiet Oscar and lacrosse-playing, boisterous Vance couldn't be more different, though, and instead of coming together, they're still fighting. It doesn't help that their mother died in a car accident three years earlier after a terrible fight with their father. How will their family work with half of it missing? However, grief can do strange things to a family. Will it rip them apart or pull them closer than ever before? Walton creates flawed, realistic characters that invite readers to root for them even as they screw up their own lives and the lives of those around them. The back-and-forth structure told in alternating voices (Oscar's in the present and Vance's recounting the past) is accomplished and offers a deep look at the complex relationship between two brothers. Although the plot and dialogue can feel manufactured and simplistic, characters and story are compelling. A sweet look at an end-of-life moment that offers surprise even as the inevitable unfolds. (Fiction. 14-17)
School Library Journal (Wed Mar 01 00:00:00 CST 2017)Gr 9 Up-adically different brothers Oscar and Vance must contend with their father's impending death and the alcoholism and abusiveness that preceded it. After their mother's death, artistic Oscar blocks out his father's escalating drinking and builds a wall for himself, retreating into silence and focusing on the drawings of his family that he keeps hidden. Meanwhile, popular, outgoing Vance, critical of Oscar's introversion, seems to idolize his hard-partying father, embracing his crudeness and often dismissing the severity of his father's addiction and declining health. Written in the first person from Oscar's and Vance's points of view, the chapters alternate between the brothers waiting out the end of their father's life, after his drinking sends him into liver failure, and recollections of the three years that have passed since their mother's death. The shift in time periods and perspective gives readers an understanding of how this family's tragedy has created and sustained the brothers' antipathy toward each other and how they must work their way out of it if they are to remain a family after their father dies. This smart, emotional, and surprising read is recommended for those who like to keep a tissue box nearby or those living with similar issues. VERDICT This well-done portrayal of sibling relationships during hardship belongs on most YA shelves.Joanna Sondheim, Columbia Grammar &; Preparatory School, New York
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)In this psychologically intense novel from Walton (
Voice of Youth Advocates
ALA Booklist (Sun Jan 01 00:00:00 CST 2017)
Kirkus Reviews
School Library Journal (Wed Mar 01 00:00:00 CST 2017)
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
From the author of Cracked and Empty comes a gripping, emotional story of two brothers who must make the ultimate decision about what's more important: family or their differences. It's not Oscar's fault he's misunderstood. Ever since his mother died, he's been disrespected by his father and bullied by his self-absorbed older brother, so he withdraws from his fractured family, seeking refuge in his art. Vance wishes his younger brother would just loosen up and be cool. It was hard enough to deal with their mother's death without Oscar getting all emotional. At least when Vance pushes himself in lacrosse and parties, he feels alive. But when their father's alcoholism sends him into liver failure, the two brothers must come face-to-face with their demons--and each other--if they are going to survive a very uncertain future.