As a sophomore in high school, certain aspects make a book special and this book truly has it. A book with a lot of action allows me to read it over and over again. I have read books all my life but rarely liked them. This book offers a point of view that most authors don’t give. Which is the number of emotions the characters go through. In his final novel, Invasion which was published 10 years ago to this date, famed American author, Walter Dean Myers, takes his readers inside the mind of a teenage boy—his name: Josiah Wedgewood or Woody. Formatted into many long and short chapters varying between 7 to 20 minutes. Walter captures the emotions and feelings associated with a teenage brain in WWII. An element in the book that made it stand out was how the author expressed the emotions of all the characters. It reminds me a lot of how I felt before a big tournament or final exam. The novel starts by establishing Woody’s fear of fighting. He has always gone back and forth between whether or not fighting the Germans is a good thing. Ever since he joined he made friends that have either felt the same way or the complete opposite. His fear begins on D-Day where constantly thinks about what's going to happen and how he's going to die. Throughout the book, he doesn’t overcome his fear of dying which is something that he struggles with throughout the story. Although this book was able to connect with me, I struggled to want to continue this book. It seemed that the novel moved kind of slowly and didn’t receive much action. Due to the low amount of action and the constant reminder of how scared the characters are, I was unable to understand the storyline. It ended up with an unclear climactic moment which led to some confusion throughout the novel. While I did enjoy some of the chapters, there were a few that repeated over and over again. I would follow a specific sequence during the whole book like action, sleep, talk about emotions, and repeat. This whole book was written in this specific sequence around 4 times. The various types of chapters in length, allowed Myers to cover a lot of different topics, but it did repeat the sequence constantly. Overall, this book has opened my eyes to a different type of writing and how an author can connect with the reader through personal connections, so I give it 2.5 stars out of 5. Although having some love for historical fiction, Myer’s Invasion is a nominated book that truly connects the voice of the main characters to the reader, but it just isn’t for me. As a sophomore in high school, I don’t know much about literature, but this book is something that I wouldn’t want to read over and over again, but overall it's worth a read.