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Interpersonal relations. Fiction.
Automobile travel. Fiction.
Grief. Fiction.
Cancer. Fiction.
College choice. Fiction.
Jack Freeman wakes up on the day of his eighteenth birthday and high-school graduation with his life set out for him: a summer internship before he starts premed at Columbia University. Everything starts to unravel when he realizes that he has been trying to please everyone except himself. After a chance encounter with former classmate Hallie in a rideshare, he embarks on a journey to find his brother, Alex, in San Francisco. Alex left just before their father died, and Jack hasn't heard from him since. He travels to San Francisco with Hallie, whose experience with cancer motivated her to go on her own odyssey. Circumstances have her spending the day with Jack in San Francisco, and as they roam the city, they open up to each other and explore the idea of rewriting their futures to suit themselves. Jack and Hallie alternate in the narrative, and each has a distinct voice. Although the details of their lives contrast, these differences later become the seeds that help them pursue their own paths and live in the moment. Reul delivers a road trip with meaning.
Kirkus ReviewsThe best road trip may be the one that's unplanned.On the doubly momentous day of Jack's 18th birthday and high school graduation in Southern California, he's still grieving his father's recent death. His mother, a sex therapist to celebrities, is away on a book tour, and his longtime girlfriend has just broken up with him. While packing for a next-day flight to start an internship in New York before heading to Columbia, he discovers a letter from his father to his missing older brother, who struggles with drug addiction and is apparently living in San Francisco. Across town, Hallie, who dropped out of school her sophomore year due to cancer, plots to sneak away from her parents' pancake restaurant to attend the assisted suicide in Portland of a friend she met in an online support group. Alternating first-person chapters recount their converging storylines as Jack decides to find his brother and Hallie's bus gets delayed. With an aspiring actor as their ride-hireâapp driver, the teens spend 24 hours together, traveling north and exploring. Reul presents a fresh take on serendipitous encounters as a mix of humorous escapades and soulful discussions cause Jack and Hallie to reevaluate their futures and take charge of their lives, with a hint of romance also driving the tension. Excepting Jack's best friend who is implied Indian American, characters are White by default.A feel-good story with depth. (Fiction. 14-18)
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)Jack-s turning 18 and graduating from his Los Angeles high school, but instead of experiencing excitement, he feels like he-s -held together with off-brand masking tape.- His sex therapist mother is on a book tour and hasn-t come home to celebrate, his father died a year ago, and he-s estranged from his brother, who has a history of drug dependence. Then his girlfriend breaks up with him. So when he finds a letter that suggests his brother-s in San Francisco, it-s easy enough for Jack to head for the bus station. There, he bumps into former classmate Hallie, who-s also headed north, having scraped together the money for a bus to Oregon, to be present for the death of a friend from her online cancer support group. They end up joining Oscar, the GoodCarma driver they-ve just met, for a misadventure-filled road trip. Lacing the book with elements of mysticism and self-help, including signs from beyond and 12-step precepts, Ruel (
Gr 9 Up-It's Jack's last day of high school and his 18th birthday. Still reeling from the death of his father the previous year, struggling with anxiety, and feeling ambivalent about his college plans, Jack has a lot on his plate. When his girlfriend, Natasha, drops a bomb on him days before they are set to begin the next chapter of their lives together, it throws everything into question. Meanwhile, Hallie's cancer diagnosis and subsequent treatment have forced her to miss out on much of her high school experience and has put a strain on her family's finances. Although she has been in remission for some time, she has found it difficult to plan for the future or find pleasure in things she used to enjoy. At the start of this novel, her thoughts are consumed by some concerning news she received at her last doctor's appointment. After their paths cross in a serendipitous meeting, Jack and Hallie end up on an unexpected road trip together, both searching for answers. In alternating perspectives, the protagonists feel authentic, as does the connection they form. While the ending wraps up a bit too tidily, readers will be invested in these characters and enjoy watching them become confident in forging their own paths versus doing what is expected of them. Main characters' ethnicity isn't stated. VERDICT A fun and thought-provoking read for mid-size or larger collections. Kimberly Tolson, Millis P.L., MA
ALA Booklist (Thu Apr 01 00:00:00 CDT 2021)
Kirkus Reviews
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
School Library Journal (Mon Feb 01 00:00:00 CST 2021)
"A beautiful, tender and thoughtful meditation on finding your way."--Nicola Yoon, #1 New York Times bestselling author of Everything, Everything and The Sun Is Also a Star A heartfelt and hilarious adventure about two teens trying to find their way, for fans of Jennifer Niven and Nicola Yoon. Jack is on the verge of leaving for college, but before he does, he wants to track down his estranged brother, Alex and find some closure in the wake of their father's death. Meanwhile, Hallie has just found out some upsetting news about a friend in Oregon, and she has a small window to go see him before it's too late. Jack and Hallie are practically strangers. They shared a class together years ago and haven't seen each other since, though they have more in common than they'd ever imagine. And when fate puts them into the same rideshare to the bus terminal, it kicks off an unconventional and hysterical adventure that may lead them to their own true selves...and maybe to each other. Additional praise for Where the Road Leads Us: "A lovely, compassionate, and compulsive read."--Kathleen Glasgow, New York Times bestselling author of Girl in Pieces and How to Make Friends with the Dark "A soul-filling, raw, love song of a novel."--Jennifer Niven, #1 New York Times bestselling author of All the Bright Places "Propels you through a heartfelt adventure. I couldn't put it down."--Jeff Garvin, author of Lambda Literary Award finalist Symptoms of Being Human "Anyone who has faced loss and uncertainty in their life will relate to this emotionally honest, hopeful book."--Misa Sugiura, author of It's Not Like It's a Secret and This Time Will Be Different "A tender and heartfelt read with an ending both hopeful and sincere, and readers will happily share the ride."--BCCB "A feel-good story with depth."--Kirkus Reviews Also by Robin Reul: My Kind of Crazy