Publishers Weekly
(Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
Juniper -Juni- Lemon, 16, is struggling with the death of her older sister, Camie. Using a method that Camie taught her to see the good in life, Juni writes down the positive and negative things that happen during a given day on numbered index cards. When Juni finds a breakup letter her sister wrote to an unknown -you,- she decides to track down the mystery paramour to deliver the note. But things go awry on the first day of school when Juni loses index card #65, which marks the number of days since the car accident that killed Camie and carries Juni-s deepest secret. Israel-s debut novel sensitively examines loss, survivor-s guilt, and how one girl attempts to rebuild her life. The index cards help readers keep track of Juni-s healing amid a found-object art project, new friendships, and a blossoming romance. Israel handles the long, painful process of negotiating grief gently and realistically while cleverly interweaving the light mystery of -you-s- identity throughout, keeping readers guessing as Juni steps closer to finding closure. Ages 12-up. Agent: Susan Hawk, Bent Agency. (May)
School Library Journal Starred Review
(Mon May 01 00:00:00 CDT 2017)
Gr 9 Up-t has been 65 days since Camie died in a car accident. Her sister, Juniper, has been coping with the aftermath of the event. She can't find happiness and struggles with former relationships. Juniper then discovers a mysterious letter from her late sister addressed to "You" and begins a mission to learn who the intended recipient is. While on the path of mourning, Juniper wrestles with her sadness, guilt, and identity in a world where her sister doesn't exist. During the search for "You," Juniper crosses paths with other classmates, who unexpectedly change one another's lives and expose secrets. Themes of loss and emotional growth resonate throughout this novel. Told from Juniper's point of view, the book recounts events on a day-to-day basis, and the narrative is peppered with lists, poems, notes, and letters. While friendships and love interests arise, the emphasis is on Juniper's ability to deal with loss. Israel brings together a diverse cast of characters with problems to which many readers can relate. The added mystery of the letter entwined within the plot will make it easy for readers to become invested in the outcome. This heartwarming work will appeal to fans of Cori McCarthy's You Were Here. VERDICT A well-told story of teen struggles and grief that will resonate with readers.Melissa Poole, Clemson University Library, Anderson, SC
Horn Book
(Sun Apr 01 00:00:00 CDT 2018)
Since her sister's death, Juniper Lemon has kept a daily "happiness index"--a practice inspired by Camilla's optimism. When Juniper loses index card #65, her frenzied search through school Dumpsters inspires an art project involving found objects, leading to connections with lonely classmates. With sweet romance, light mystery, high-school social shenanigans, and memorable characters, Israel's debut is conventional YA realism in the most appealing sense.
ALA Booklist
(Mon May 01 00:00:00 CDT 2017)
Going back to school for junior year feels overwhelming after losing her older sister in a car accident, but Juniper Lemon has a daily ritual to keep her grounded: the Happiness Index. It started as a dare r sister, Camie, challenged Juniper to track positive things each day t after the accident, it becomes a reassuring habit to number each index card and fill it with both positives and negatives. When she accidentally misplaces number 65 at school and searches in the Dumpster, she finds someone else's secret instead: a fellow classmate's suicide note. Despite misunderstood bad-boy Brand's advice ("Good intentions have wiped out whole civilizations . . . tread carefully"), Juniper embarks on a mission to help several struggling classmates, some who also had ties to Camie. Once Israel's complicated opening gets rolling, this hits a smooth pace and ends on an unresolved but optimistic note that is genuine and satisfying. An earnest debut about coping with loss and trauma.
Kirkus Reviews
Every day, Juniper writes about the positive and negative aspects of her life on an index card to cope with the hole in her life left when her sister, Camilla, died.The two white sisters were driving home from a party on the Fourth of July when the crash occurred. Now Juniper is back in high school and has to face—or hide from—her friends. The discovery of a breakup letter in Camie's handwriting addressed only to "You" and the loss of one of her index cards send Juniper on a two-pronged mission. She resorts to dumpster-diving to find the card from day No. 65 with the help of local white bad-boy Brand and tries to figure out who "You" could be. Along the way she manages to channel her energy into an art project that helps her deal with her loss, but not before she interferes with the lives of several people by trying to fix their problems. Israel's debut is pretty standard fare, full of well-worn tropes of high school life as background to Juniper's first-person story of personal growth: bullies; distant parents; a guitar-playing, reckless love interest; a gay friend; there is even a school dance and a summer beach party to wrap things up. Wound into the familiar narrative is insight into bringing closure to grief and the reality of untold, unknowable secrets. (Fiction. 12-17)