This review will be published on The Wellesley News website in the coming weeks! I'll update my review with a link when it's up.
It is always incredibly cool seeing how a book actually comes to be, but the story of “Study Break” is one that could only have happened with a book like this: it all started on Twitter.
Over a year ago, Camryn Garrett tweeted that she wanted more YA books set in college. Ananya Devarajan quote tweeted it with a concept: an anthology of intertwining college-set stories. It got … a lot of likes.
And then it became real, an actual collection of stories written by current or recently-graduated college students and edited by Aashna Avachat. To me, watching from the sidelines, it was like magic. I nearly screamed when Ananya sneakily told me about it before it was announced officially. I screamed more when I finally read it.
“Study Break” follows a bunch of students at the fictional University of Milbridge, a college of indeterminate size at an indeterminate place in the US. The stories are arranged in chronological order, one happening in every month (except two in December), bookended with poetry by Oyin (the pen name for acquiring editor Foyinsi Adegbonmire). Characters sometimes make recurring appearances in various stories, which all have heartwarming coming-of-age themes.
I loved every story in this collection, which is extremely rare for a short story anthology; there are usually at least a few that aren’t for me. Maybe that’s just because I know almost every author who contributed a story to this, or maybe it’s also because it was acquired by my editor, and I know that makes me incredibly biased, but at this point, I don’t think anyone expects my book reviews to be unbiased.
It’s hard for me to even point to my favorite stories. I feel like by shouting out any story in this anthology, it would do a disservice to the others because they all exist in tandem with one another, often even involving the same groups of friends. But what I will say is there’s something in here for everyone: successful (and less successful) love stories, complicated family relationships, academic crises and more. Swifties will love this book — I counted at least three Taylor Swift references.
What I think is most striking about “Study Break” is that it almost has to be as diverse as it is. Teens and young adults of marginalized identities often don’t have their big coming-of-age moments until after high school, only once they leave home for the first time, because of a variety of factors that I really do not have the space to get into. College has certainly been a big point of self-discovery for me in a much different way from my white allocishet peers, and the stories in “Study Break” reflect that experience immensely well.
Anyway, this is my public plea to the creative team behind this book: please, please let there be a second University of Milbridge book. I cannot express enough how important this book is to me.
“Study Break” comes out on March 7, 2023. Yes, I did neglect many review copies I have that are coming out much sooner in order to review this. Many thanks to the publisher (my publisher!), Feiwel & Friends, for the early copy.