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Si existiera la posibilidad de perderse en el infinito del universo, Carrie lo habría intentado sin dudarlo, pero sólo tiene su telescopio y el enorme vacío que le dejó la muerte de su hermana mayor. Desde que no está, ha intentado revivir las cosas que a ella le gustaban, como escuchar una y otra vez sus canciones favoritas para memorizarlas, salir de fiesta y perder el control. Sin percatarse, Carrie se sumerge en un oscuro vórtice del que ni la música ni sus nuevos amigos la salvan, hasta que su padre decide intervenir.
Cuando conoce a Dean, su nuevo vecino, él le muestra que la vida es como su amado cielo nocturno: a veces está llena de hoyos negros rebosantes de dolor, pero otras veces plagada de resplandecientes meteoritos.
275 pages, Kindle Edition
First published October 4, 2016
“And then, for some reason, I hated my job twelve percent less.”

I received this eARC via the publisher from NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.
All quotes are from the ARC and subject to change.
“Before Ginny died, that was how it felt when I got upset: like I was about to throw up. Ginny used to be the one to talk me down, to stand at the door of my room and say, softly, “Caraway, take a deep breath, come here, hold my hand.”
“An exploding star.”
“I thought they were made of gas.”
“Most of them have every single element in the entire universe. That calcium deposit could be billions of years old – it could be made of the stuff that was present when the universe was born. Is that the coolest, or what?”
“I have a statement. I think you need to be open to the idea that people will surprise you. At any time, someone you’re sure will disappoint you may come through. Find a little optimism somewhere.”
“Eventually every star will explode. There’s no getting around it.”
“Maybe they’re not gone, those stars. Maybe they’re just lost. Maybe they’re just trying to find their way home.”