Publisher's Hardcover ©2020 | -- |
Library Binding ©2020 | -- |
Emotional problems. Fiction.
Friendship. Fiction.
Boarding schools. Fiction.
Schools. Fiction.
Grief and guilt weigh heavily on Cara's heart months after a New Year's Eve accident in which she was the designated driver and G, her best friend, lost her life. After recuperative and psychiatric help, and to give Cara a new start, her mother enrolls her in a remote private school in Switzerland. Reluctantly, Cara goes, her insecurities and fears revealing themselves the minute she embarks on a car trip. As far as Cara knows, no one is aware of her past d certainly not the truths she kept to herself t her roommate, Ren, and classmate Hector won't let her disappear into herself. The more they welcome her into their lives, the more Cara fears leaving the past behind. Despite Cara believing she's the only one who's hurting, the realities and levels of healing are also evident in the words and deeds of her peers. Lessons are learned, albeit slowly, and assumptions often result in surprisingly truthful revelations. A contemplative debut for fans of boarding-school stories and second chances.
Kirkus ReviewsA grieving young woman finds help at a Swiss boarding school in this realistic novel.Seventeen-year-old Cara arrives at Hope Hall feeling as if she's been flung as far as possible from her previous home near San Francisco. Months earlier, a car accident, in which she was the driver, killed her best friend, G, and left Cara struggling with anxiety and agonizing in a deep well of self-blame. She's surprised and touched, if wary, that her new roommate, Ren, is patient and empathetic, and Cara is reluctantly drawn into her tight, complicated friendship with Fred and Hector, two other students. There are poignant and genuine moments in Cara's introspective first-person narration, and many readers will enjoy the idyllic setting in the mountains of Switzerland and the pan-European cast of characters: Cara lived in England before her parents' abrupt divorce led to her mother's marrying an American and fleeing the country, Hector is Spanish and English, Ren is French, and Fred is Swedish. They are all white; Ren is also gay. Cara's experience of her grief is realistically messy, but some readers will find its blending with a romance with Hector too pat and the slow build of her coming to terms with the actual events leading up to G's death too melodramatic.An engaging, at times moving, debut that doesn't always quite ring true. (Fiction. 12-18)
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)On her way home from a New Year-s Eve party, British-American Cara-s life is shattered when the vehicle she is driving is hit by a truck and her best friend, Georgina, is killed. Wracked with guilt and unable to function, Cara reluctantly follows her mother-s suggestion to leave California and spend her senior year abroad. Cara knows that she will never meet her mother-s expectation that she return to her old self; if she goes somewhere new, maybe she can hide her past. With compassion and sensitivity, first-time author De Pass traces the psychological changes Cara undergoes as she attends an isolated boarding school in Switzerland and becomes close with three students from different countries, all of whom have had to deal with traumas of their own. With their help, Cara finds the courage to confront the one horrible truth about the accident she has never told anyone. Enhanced by its evocative setting, a warm refuge surrounded by mountains, De Pass-s novel clearly depicts who Cara was previously, who she is now, and how the revelation of her secret affects her relationship with others. Her multiple layers of emotional pain and fear will affect readers deeply. Ages 12-up. (Mar.)
School Library Journal (Sat Feb 01 00:00:00 CST 2020)Gr 7 Up-Cara has survived a car accident that killed her best friend, G. Battling grief, depression, and internal and external scars, Cara is sent to boarding school in Switzerland by her mother, who thinks all she needs is a clean slate. Cara journeys through the snowy Alps to Hope Hall with very little hope. But a unique trio, Ren, Hector, and Fred, have other things in mind. Not only do they want to befriend Cara, but they want to know all her secrets. Cara shuts herself off, but the trio push back hard, and Cara reluctantly learns to open up to people who really care about her. She learns that with loyalty, love, and strong friendship, things get better, and she discovers the importance of forgiveness and acceptance. This book tackles difficult subjects like mental health, grief, depression, and survivor's guilt; some parts may be hard for anyone who has gone through something comparable. But de Pass is an excellent writer, handling these topics gracefully, and readers will easily connect with her characters. VERDICT A good choice for readers who enjoyed Stephanie Perkins's Anna and the French Kiss and Gayle Forman's If I Stay . Caitlin Wilson, Meadowdale Library, North Chesterfield, VA
ALA Booklist (Tue May 01 00:00:00 CDT 2018)
Kirkus Reviews
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
School Library Journal (Sat Feb 01 00:00:00 CST 2020)
If I'd known the temperature in exile would be this low, I'd have found it within me to put up more of a fight. Even if there was anyone to hear me now, the time for protest has come and gone; I'm a very long way from home.
I allow the minutes to pass, watching as the soft, sticky snow is caught in the wind outside the taxi and, on its descent, is forced back high into the air.
The driver my mother arranged to meet me at the airport, perhaps mistaking my silence for fascination, seems to decide it's safe to speak. "Excited for your new school?" he asks, the words barely decipherable through his thick French accent.
I don't reply at once, allowing my finger to slide across the misted glass of the window. When I eventually do, I don't bother to curb the sarcasm in my voice, knowing that the language barrier will mask it anyway. "Excited?"
I don't know why I phrase my response as a question. I don't want to invite him to have a conversation with me, or for anything he says to be memorable. I want to forget him, just like I want to forget everything else.
He laughs nervously before continuing. "Is it your first time in Switzerl--"
The end of his question is lost. I watch in horror as he swerves out of the path of an oncoming truck and closer to the edge of the winding, narrow road up the mountainside. There are no barriers to the waiting abyss below, and I feel my body tense as I clutch at the door handle. Every muscle turns to glass as the car, losing its grip on the icy road, coasts to the right. I close my eyes, waiting for impact. Time converts to slow motion, and I wait to hear the screams. For the world to blur out of focus. For the earsplitting pop of the airbags deploying. For the pain.
For a split second, I feel euphoric. Maybe I won't survive this time.
Instead, I feel the car veer back to the left, away from danger, and am drawn into real time as the driver resumes his nervous laugh. He sounds the horn too late, when the truck is a dot in the distance, and I catch him looking at me in the rearview mirror. "Crazy drivers," he says with a repentant smile.
I don't smile back, anxiously tracing my fingers over the frayed edges of the seat belt, and find my most unforgiving stare. "Just keep your eyes on the road," I snap.
--
In the hour that follows, the driver tries again to engage me in conversation, but this time I ignore him, not bothering to disguise my hostility. I keep my eyes off the encircling Swiss mountains, focusing on bringing all my fear-frozen limbs back to life. Trying not to think about what could have happened. Or about the part of me that momentarily welcomed it.
My mind is filled instead with a memory from eight months ago, when I woke up one morning in the hospital back in California to the sound of voices. My mother and one of the nurses were trying--not particularly well--to speak in hushed tones.
"Cara's psychiatrist, Dr. Burns, wants us to keep her in for a few more nights to observe her," the nurse said.
My mother, probably irritated by the inconvenience of my prolonged stay (the hospital was over an hour from where we lived), responded sulkily. "Why on earth would she need to stay? Her injuries are physical and, as the doctor said again this morning, relatively minor. The fact that she escaped with just a broken arm is a miracle in itself. But she did--now that she's healthy enough to go home, that's where she's going."
"That's the thing, though, Mrs. Cooper--"
"Mrs. Blair," my mother interrupted--as she always does when people call her by my father's name. It took her no time at all to remarry after my father left, and even in the interim months, as I like to call them, she reverted to her maiden name.
"Sorry, Mrs. Blair," the nurse continued, "but Dr. Burns isn't convinced that Cara is healthy. She's concerned that your daughter is having suicidal thoughts."
I can almost imagine my mother's eyes widening in horror at this, her glancing around to check no one we knew was in the vicinity. "My daughter is not suicidal!"
To her credit, the nurse's voice remained steady. "It wouldn't be surprising if she were suffering from a form of post-traumatic stress disorder. Cara has lived through a very distressing experience."
There was a long pause while my mother digested the nurse's words.
"It's a mental illness--" the nurse continued.
"I know what it is. I just don't want to hear any more," my mother cut in. "I am her legal guardian, so give me whatever forms I need to get her out of this place. Mental illness. Honestly. She's in shock, not mentally ill."
"It would be against medical advice," the nurse warned. "You'd have to sign a waiver."
My mother's response was curt, all attempts at whispering put aside. "Then get me that waiver."
In retrospect, two elements of this exchange stand out. Firstly, that my injuries were described as physical. The physical pain of breaking my arm in four places was nothing compared to the other pain I experience daily when I remember what else was broken that night--something metal bolts can't fix. Secondly, that this injury and the endless web of bruises that covered my body were described as minor. Nothing about the accident felt minor, and calling it so felt as though they were belittling it, making it seem as though it, in the grand scheme of things, didn't matter.
My eyes stay glued to the seat in front. I don't want to risk looking out again at the scene whipping past the windows. The fact that I have gotten this far in my journey is a near miracle. Even so, I'm at the limits of my endurance and am relieved when I register the car slowing. As soon as we stop, I fling myself out into the open, hiding my hands behind my back so the driver won't see they're still shaking.
"Your destination," he says, gesturing up to the large building.
It looks more like a Russian palace than a school: a flat-fronted, sky-blue façade of a building of at least six stories, with three golden domes on the roof. There are crumbling touches of the same gold paint around symmetrical, old-fashioned windows, and on the ground-floor level, mint-green and white-striped awnings protrude. I turn around, with the extravagant structure behind me, and look out at the view. There is a cable-car station to my right. I follow the wire supporting the still, suspended carriages until it is swallowed by a small town on a nearby mountainside.
Now that my feet are firmly on solid ground, the descent between the two peaks doesn't feel quite so perilous. The school itself does feel like a slight safety hazard, though; it's dangerously close to the edge of the mountain, with just a waist-high pale blue iron fence to keep everyone penned in. Even then, as I notice the elaborate twists of the metal, it feels more like a decorative feature than a precautionary one.
"Should I bring this in for you?" the driver asks as he unloads my luggage.
"I'm fine," I say quickly, pulling the one duffel bag I brought with me from his grasp and hauling it over my shoulder. At the last minute I look back and murmur a hesitant "Thanks."
He looks startled, so I turn away from him and head toward the entrance. As I get closer, two figures come into focus: a girl and a boy of around my age. The girl has a long stream of dark red hair that falls below her shoulders. Her skin is fair, like mine, but covered with freckles. The boy at her side is at least a head taller and lanky, but with a round, childish face and white-blond hair.
"Let me take that," the boy says, gesturing to my bag. His words sound strange and unfamiliar, tinted with another accent--perhaps something Scandinavian.
"I've got it," I say, then instantly regret it. This is exactly what my mother warned me not to do. It'll be a clean slate for you, she reasoned. Nobody will know you there--you can go back to being yourself again. Her words had extinguished what was left of my fight. Surely she knows as well as I do that there is no going back. Yet now, despite the fact that I can't fathom how I'll pull it off, I resolve to try to seem normal in front of these strangers. I can't smile, so I adjust my expression to the brightest one I know.
"Welcome to Hope Hall," the girl says.
Excerpted from The Year after You by Nina de Pass
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.
"I love this sad, beautiful, hopeful book." --Kathleen Glasgow, New York Times bestselling author of Girl in Pieces and How to Make Friends With the Dark
For fans of Nina LaCour and Jennifer Niven, a richly layered novel that's both uplifting and heartbreaking, about piecing yourself together after loss and the dark truths we choose to keep from each other and ourselves.
San Francisco. New Year's Eve. A tragic accident after the party of the year. Cara survives. Her best friend, G, doesn't.
Nine months later, Cara is still struggling, consumed by grief and a dark secret she'd rather forget. In the hopes of offering a fresh start, her mother sends her to boarding school in Switzerland, a place where no one knows what happened--and where they never will, if Cara can help it.
But her new classmates Ren and Hector won't let her close herself off. They are determined to break down the walls she has so carefully built up. And maybe Cara wants them to . . . especially Hector, who seems to understand her like no one else does.
The problem is that the closer Cara gets to Hector, the more G slips away. If moving on means letting go of the past--and admitting what she did that night--Cara's not sure how. But a second chance awaits, if she can only find the strength within herself.
"A poignant exploration of grief, guilt, and forgiveness." --Sophie Kinsella, New York Times bestselling author of Finding Audrey and the Shopaholic series
"Transportive and redemptive, this is a gentle story about the universality of grief, the beauty of self-forgiveness, and how new friendship can help heal old wounds."--Ashley Woodfolk, author of The Beauty That Remains and When You Were Everything
"Atmospheric....this is a delicious read."-Irish Times
"A good choice for readers who enjoyed Stephanie Perkins's Anna and the French Kiss and Gayle Forman's If I Stay."--SLJ