Copyright Date:
2024
Edition Date:
2024
Release Date:
07/16/24
Pages:
334 pages
ISBN:
1-419-76727-5
ISBN 13:
978-1-419-76727-2
Dewey:
Fic
LCCN:
2023036727
Dimensions:
22 cm.
Language:
English
Reviews:
Kirkus Reviews
In the afterlife, two teenagers connect and search for answers following their deaths.In life at Winterton High School, Kenny Zhou and Caroline Davison hardly interacted, but after each dies unexpectedly, they find themselves together in a mysterious white room with a television screen that shows them the ones they left behind. Kenny, a science whiz whose closest friend was loyal fellow Science Olympian Iris Mutisya, was the son of Chinese immigrant parents who owned a restaurant that's now on the brink of bankruptcy. Kenny and Iris, who's Black, stood out in their overwhelmingly white school. Popular Caroline, who's white, left behind her high-status parents, younger brother, and boyfriend. She doesn't remember her death and has trouble accepting it. As they watch their loved ones mourn while also forming new connections with one another, Caroline and Kenny build their own tentative bond with each other. But as love, memory, and grief play out in the search for healing, the fragile trust among everyone is tested. Yu addresses complicated, uncomfortable themes around race, privilege, and power, though at times the portrayal of some characters, such as Caroline's mother, feels lacking in nuance. But the conceit is a perennially popular one, the plot is absorbing, and the measured tone is effective.A quietly moving tale that asks how privilege might affect the search for closure in the wake of tragedy. (Speculative fiction. 14-18)
Jennifer Yu’s Grief in the Fourth Dimension is a moving and unique speculative YA novel about the afterlife and the unexpected connections that can be made in death.
In life, high school classmates Caroline Davison and Kenny Zhou existed in separate universes—Caroline in one of softball practices and family dinners; Kenny in one of NASA photo books and late-night shifts at his parents’ Chinese restaurant.
But after their deaths, they find themselves thrown together as roommates in a mysterious white room—one that seems to exist outside of time and space, shows them their loved ones’ lives on a large hi-def TV, and grants their wishes with a sardonic sense of humor.
As Caroline and Kenny watch life continue to unfold back on Earth, they realize they can influence events through radio signals, psychic mediums, and electromagnetic interference. In their efforts to console their families, they also start to understand the tragic depth of how their lives and deaths were connected and how to help their families—and themselves—heal from the losses.