OK, I liked it. I really did. But I loved Ghost so much, that you couldn't help but be slightly disappointed by this one. It was great, it just wasn't AS great as Ghost's story.
There was very little track or running involved in this one. The story seemed to revolve around Patina's day to day activities in an almost - dare I say it? - tedious manner. She woke up, she had breakfast, she went to school, avoided all the snobby people at school, had to sit through her silly group of girls for the group project on Frida Kahlo, went to get her younger sister, then their aunt picked them up from school, dropped her off to track rehearsals, where she had minimal conversations, then was picked up again by her aunt where they sat through the car ride and had the exact same conversation they have every single day, then they got home where she goes to finish her homework, and asks her sister if she needed help with any assignments, then was called down for dinner, the same dinner they have every single evening, with their aunt running the conversation around the table, then off to bed.
Sundays were different. Sundays they go pick up their mom, who had her legs amputated due to the spread of Diabetes, and they go to church.
There were also a couple of changes to the routine when she had to go to a girl's house to work on the group project, and another time when she had to go to the hospital.
Otherwise, that's basically all there was to it. And that was disappointing.
I wanted to see more, read more, find out more. I wanted more interactions with Patina and the track kids. I wanted more Ghost, more Sunny, more Lou. More coach. I finished the book, but didn't feel like I knew Patina well yet. I was hoping I would, but I didn't.
So now, I'm sitting here wondering how to review it properly, and I can't. I just found out the next book will be about Sunny, and that's exciting. Sunny is a character we know, and we've seen, so it must be good! I hope.