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256 pages, Kindle Edition
First published September 5, 2017
“This is more than a road trip. It’s a quest, a pilgrimage.”
This book is a trip, quest, pilgrimage, and more! I LOVED this book! This is the book I’ve been waiting all summer for. I absolutely devoured “The Long Ride Home” – read it cover to cover (well, digital cover to cover, that is) is 3½ hours; it was that good!
In “The Long Ride Home,” Juliet (who prefers to go by her nickname Harley) sets off on a cross-country motorcycle trip to return the ashes of her recently-departed mother to their favorite beach in NYC. So that she doesn’t have to go alone, Harley brings along her only L.A. friend, Dean. But Dean is really more than a friend. He and Harley slept together once, and now she’s fighting the growing feelings she has for him – after the death of her mother, she can’t let anyone else get that close. But Harley may have to let Dean in because he would be the father of her “maybe baby.” But events on this run-of-the-mill road trip quickly take a decidedly disastrous turn (or turns), and Harley is left feeling even more lost and alone than when she left.
Why did I love this book so much? Well, for one, I love road trip books. I’ve never been brave enough to take a cross-country trip myself, so I enjoy the vicarious thrill of the ride through the characters of books. But the fact that this book was about a road trip is only what got me to crack the cover. As Harley says, this is about much more than a mere road trip. While Harley does stop off at two places of significance to her past, this book departs from the traditional road trip plot of a set of characters who make multiple, increasingly significant stops along their way to a destination. No, in this book, Harley mostly makes stops because it’s dark out, and she needs to rest. This trip is a soul journey – a quest to find the strength to keep living after a devastating loss and deal with the tough situations popping up in the present. This book is about so much more than a trip.
I adored the character of Harley. Ok, admittedly, I got a little tired of reading about her crying and being upset over the death of her mother. But then I slapped myself and said, Hey! This girl just lost her mother! Give her a break! Harley’s voice was honest, raw, and real. And snarky! God, I loved the snark! So typically teenage! I also appreciated how real the author made Harley’s actions and reactions. She does some really “bitchy” things (to quote Harley, herself). She lashes out, hurts the people around her, and makes some exceedingly poor decisions. Just like a teenager faced with this scenario would. I think young adult readers will really identify with Harley because of how authentically she is portrayed.
This book was an emotional roller coaster! I laughed, I cried, and I outright bawled like a baby for the whole last chapter. But, even though this book deals with some very real, very heavy topics, it still felt light and hopeful and optimistic. All of these reasons are why I LOVED, LOVED, LOVED “The Long Ride Home.”