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This Light Between Us de Andrew Fukuda
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This Light Between Us (edició 2020)

de Andrew Fukuda

MembresRessenyesPopularitatValoració mitjanaMencions
10610256,705 (4.19)4
In 1935, ten-year-old Alex Maki of Bainbridge Island, Washington, is horrified to discover that his new pen pal, Charlie Lévy of Paris, France, is a girl, but in spite of his initial reluctance, their letters continue over the years and they fight for their friendship even as Charlie endures the Nazi occupation and Alex leaves his family in an internment camp and joins the Army.… (més)
Membre:SandraBrower
Títol:This Light Between Us
Autors:Andrew Fukuda
Informació:Tor Teen, ebook, 384 pages
Col·leccions:Read, Llegint actualment, Per llegir
Valoració:
Etiquetes:currently-reading

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This Light Between Us de Andrew Fukuda

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When I tell you I almost cried after reading this…
Keep in mind, I don’t usually get teary over books. So the fact that I was so close to crying and the only thing that stopped me was the fact that I was in public is a big deal.
This book broke my heart in the best way. It’s such a wonderful story. I have to respect the author, because this is truly amazing.
If you’re about to read it, all I have to say to you is get some tissues. You’ll need it. ( )
  That_Crazy_Fangirl | Jan 5, 2024 |
(3.5 / 5)

As a Japanese American during WWII, teenage Alex Maki's life begins to deteriorate until his family is sent to a detainment camp. Up to and during this time, he is pen pals with a Jewish girl in France, who is seeing the growing persecution of Jews around her. This friendship is his one bright spot in an otherwise scary, unpleasant time. They share their hopes, dreams, fears, and ideas about acceptance vs. revolt through their many letters back and forth. As the war rages on, both of their lives change in ways they can't imagine, and their strong friendship might not be enough to keep hope alive.

This book was incredible in some ways, and problematic in others. I really liked the history that was presented in this book, as well as the relationships. However, I had a difficult time with the style of writing and with the pacing.

I'll start with what I liked, which is plenty. I loved the juxtaposition of the two teenage pen pals, who most readers will understand going in are being set up for intensely difficult times ahead. While I have seen and read many books about the Jewish side of this, the Japanese American side was a fresh topic for me. It's easy to see the Nazis as evil because of what they did, but it's also easy to forget that America put their own citizens into camps (though not heinous as the Nazi camps, as is clearly recognized in this book).

There was a pivotal scene not far from the end that I was curious enough about to look up and found that it was historically accurate, which was really neat to me. And the author's notes at the end said it was one of 2 sources of inspiration for this book! Overall, I appreciated the history in this book.

I think my favorite parts of the book were the letters between Alex and his pen pal Charley. I would have been okay if more of the story had been told through those letters. I also liked the way a few other relationships developed throughout the story, particularly those between Alex and his brother Frank, and Alex and Mutt. Thinking of these, though, make me realize how light the book is on deep characters. Overall, those 4 are the only characters with any real depth, and none of them are particularly deep, besides maybe Alex and his brother.

This might be largely related to one of my biggest dislikes with the book. The story, which is presented as a personal narrative, has some strange inconsistencies in writing style. It fluctuates often between 3rd person limited and 3rd person omniscient (especially in the last third), which can at times make me feel like I have mental whiplash. Some of these sections easily could have been shown from the limited POV of Alex, rather than the broad POV of everyone involved. The story is also written in present tense, which, to me, is a strange choice for the omniscient POV. This caused the book to not flow as well as it could have.

Similarly, during the omniscient sections, there's a lot of telling, instead of showing. I'm really not a big stickler for the "show, don't tell" adage, but even I have my limits. I also would have preferred some translation for the French in some parts. This is a small gripe, because it didn't come up often, and most of the time I could guess what was being said from context. But during a pivotal scene near the end, I had to use Google to translate some phrases to make sure I knew what was being said, and I'd rather not have to leave the book in a moment like that. (There was also something said in German that the reader is led to believe was some kind of German curse, and it's not translated or even hinted at otherwise. I know enough German to know it was not a German curse, and was really quite emotional.)

So, overall, I did enjoy the book. It wasn't a favorite, but I also think that most of what bothered me was more personal preference than normal. I think most people will not be bothered by the writing style, especially. It is listed as YA, but I'm not sure how much it works for that crowd. Though I will say that the dialog at times is pretty immature, so that might work out well (it's also a little too modern, in my opinion, but I'm no expert). If you're a fan of historical fiction, especially related to WWII, you will probably like it.

Thank you to Netgalley and Tor Teen for providing me a copy of this book to review. ( )
  Kristi_D | Sep 22, 2023 |
If I never read another YA HF WWII novel again, it'd still be too soon. ( )
  cbwalsh | Sep 13, 2023 |
American boy of Japanese descent, Alex Maki, and French Jewish girl, Charlie Lévy, are paired up as pen pals when they are 9 years old and continue their correspondences for another 10 years. This might seem remarkable in its own right, with Alex and Charlie sharing so much of their lives, hopes and aspirations through their letters. But the timeframe of this YA historical fiction novel, starting in 1935, captures the heartbreaking dual tragedies of internment camps for people of Japanese descent and the Holocaust.
The story is mostly focused on Alex, with him maintaining the strong ties (sometimes supernatural) between him and Charlie as they face the harrowing and traumatic parallel changes in their lives due to war and discrimination. ( )
  deslivres5 | Apr 5, 2021 |
I haven’t before read a story that links the containment of Japanese Americans (Pearl Harbour) with the imprisonment of Jewish people in Auschwitz. Tough subject to read about but Fukuda did a good job. I chose to read this because I read his Hunt series and loved it. This is very different though still a good read. ( )
  JRlibrary | Mar 23, 2021 |
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In 1935, ten-year-old Alex Maki of Bainbridge Island, Washington, is horrified to discover that his new pen pal, Charlie Lévy of Paris, France, is a girl, but in spite of his initial reluctance, their letters continue over the years and they fight for their friendship even as Charlie endures the Nazi occupation and Alex leaves his family in an internment camp and joins the Army.

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