I know the title and the front cover of this book carry a distinctive Young Adult feel, and that's not the sort of books I regularly reach for (an understatement). But this is different: I have rarely read a Dutch novel that was so intense, so deeply explicit about feelings. In this case, it's about an intense friendship between two girls that seems more like a passionate love affair, and in a way it is, but not to be understood as a physical, lesbian relationship.
In the first part we see the sensitive, jittery Kitty as a 10-year-old, immediately intrigued by a new girl in school, Ara, who in just about everything is her polar opposite. Kitty gets completely hooked on Ara and the way Palmen describes this, through the eyes of Kitty, gives you a very uncomforable feeling: this is not a healthy relationship, not balanced. The second part, set between their 18th and 22nd anniversary, is more of the same, but you can see the first cracks in the relationship. The third part jumps 10 years ahead and is already completely different in character, because Kitty eventually comes to a realistic insight into her relationship with Ara. That last part is much less descriptive, it is full of philosophical and psychological insights and in that way very fragmented, which makes the reading particularly difficult.
I find this a very intriguing novel, which certainly is not overall successful, but rather a writing experiment, and probably even a therapeutic work (because Palmen seems to have used quite a few autobiographical elements, - as she usually does in her novels). But by the intensity with which Kitty records and analyses her own feelings, this book comes to be superior to the 'regular' Dutch literature. (rating 2.5 stars)