There are some books that, once I see the cover, I know I need to read it. I see the cover or the title and I just know that I'm going to love it.
This was one of those books.
People are always talking about Carolyn Mackler and how she is one of the greatest YA authors on the market. Now, after reading this, I understand why.
This was the first Carolyn Mackler book I have read. It is not going to be the last.
Tangled is about four people and how one week changes all of their lives. The book follows them over the course of four months, each narrator telling their side of the story. For each month, there is a different narrator. The book follows them for only a few days, but it is always enough to know that that one weekend in Paradise changed their lives.
It changed everyone.
The first narrator is Jena. Jena is a sweet, innocent girl. She has a composition notebook that she writes quotes in. She reads books written years and years before she was born.
She has never been in love.
When her mother tells her that they are going to Paradise, an island in the Caribbean, Jena is hesitant yet strangely excited to go. Jena's mother's old college friend had two extra tickets and offered them to Jena's mom and that was that. She was on her way.
Off to Paradise with Jena, her mother, and her mother's friend, was Skye. Since they were children, Jena and Skye have always been pushed together while their mothers catch up on their lives since college. Where Jena is awkward and shy, Skye is luscious and confident.
Or...she used to be.
In Paradise, Jena doesn't fall in love. She does meet a boy, and she does learn quite a few things about herself and the world of relationships. She finds a suicide note. She realizes that Paradise might not be everything she'd made it out to be.
She grows.
The second narrator is Dakota. He's the boy that Jena hooked up with. The first part of the book, Jena's part, took place in April. Now, we are in May.
Dakota is your typical teenage boy- cocky, arrogant, secretly sensitive. He has been dating a girl named Natalie on and off for quite some time. They fight and break up, get back together. They always end up alright, for the most part. Until she dies.
Now, a few months later, he has put Paradise behind him. He barely even thinks about Jena anymore. She didn't mean much of anything at all to him. Now, he only thinks about Natalie.
Dakota's part begins the day of an assembly at his high school, remembering Natalie. Her family is there, her old friends that used to be his friends. He's going to have to make a speech. He's going to have to stand in front of everyone and speak about how much he loved Natalie, how much he loves her. Fast forward a few hours and he's packing his bags for his grandparents' house.
Dakota's parents are divorced, Dakota living with his overbearing policeman father, Dakota's younger brother living with his mom. He used to visit them, the other half of his family. He doesn't anymore.
At his grandparents' house, Dakota also learns quite a bit about himself. He realizes that those few days with Jena meant a lot more to him than he thought. It's not that he has feelings for Jena, but it's that he can't do that anymore, hook up with girls. So Dakota decides to restart, with the help of a woman he meets while he's out for a walk.
Dakota decides to give himself another chance.
The third part of Tangled is from Skye's point of view. Skye has spent her whole life living in NYC, making her way around town auditioning for commercials and movies, primetime TV shows. She's landed a few roles, been rejected for almost as many. And there's always been that pressure on her, even if she puts it on herself.
The past few months, things have been...difficult for Skye. The boy she was in love with left her. The roles she have been auditioning for are draining. She's faking it, the smile and the happiness and she's an actress, so shouldn't she be able to pull it off?
She has pulled it off, for a long time. Skye doesn't think she can do it anymore.
In Paradise, she mostly just avoided everyone. She sat in the sun and in the shade and in her hotel room, thinking and thinking about the girl she used to be.
Now, in June, she's running on empty. She's auditioning for two roles that are more important than all of the other ones she's been trying for the past few months. Her mother is pushing her and pushing her, even if she doesn't mean to.
Skye can't keep going. She knows that she can't fake it anymore. She knows that is it.
She makes a decision.
The fourth and final narrator is Owen. Owen is your typical geek- tall, lanky, technology-savvy. He's awkward and shy, always hiding behind a computer screen and writing on his blog Loser With A Computer.
He is Dakota's younger brother.
When his story begins, he's at a technology detox workshop at a hotel a few towns over from where he lives, being forced to communicate with people who are just like aren't anything like him. They take his phone and his computer and he doesn't know what to do. I thought it was ironic that he was at a technology detox seminar because, earlier this week, I read Very LeFreak by Rachel Cohn, which is about the same thing.
Owen just wants to see his computer, just wants to feel it next to him. He wants to write on his blog and talk to Miz J and, wait, Miz J?
Correct. Jena.
When Jena was in Paradise, she saw Owen writing on his blog. She saw the title and she saw him but she didn't say anything because, well, she was shy.
It's easier to fall in love with someone over the internet.
It begins with a simple sentence, Jena telling Owen that he should take the bus to NYC and see her at the museum she's interning at for the summer. It would be so easy, to break out of the hotel and get on a bus. It would be so easy. So he does it.
I'm trying to be careful about the things I write about because I really don't want to give anything away. There are a lot of twists and turns in this book, which is something I loved. Owen takes the bus to NYC and finally meets Jena.
The ending of the book is perfect.
Carolyn Mackler's writing is wonderful. Funny and intense, layered characters and a layered storyline. It's easy to follow, especially because you're not jumping from character to character. In each part, you are updated on what's going on with the other characters. Even if the layout of the book was puzzling at first, it all comes together. There are no loose ends by the end of this book.
I didn't expect who wrote the suicide note. I was thinking about it the whole time I was reading the book, and when I finally found out I dropped the book and just thought, What?!
The cover and the characters, the story and the writing...it's all perfect. Carolyn Mackler has written a brilliant book about four people and how just a few days can change the rest of their lives.
We never really think about it, how important everything that happens to us is. Even the insignificant things end up meaning much more than we expect them to.
Tangled is the perfect example.
A-