I absolutely loved THE FALCONER. This novel fairly explodes with quote-worthy writing: Dana Czapnik is an extremely talented author. I started off by writing out a few memorable lines on my scratchpad, then I was forced to open a folder on my desktop and I started snipping entire pages - her writing is that good.
This is not just a story about young Lucy, who is searching for herself and her place in the world. The FALCONER is about the choices we make - and their consequences, the sacrifices required when we choose, for example, art over security, and the lies we tell ourselves when we ultimately cave in and take that well-paying job so that we can keep a roof over our heads and food in our bellies instead. Lucy learns to value her true friends, and also realizes that life will constantly shuffle people in and out of her life, no matter how much she would prefer to hold on to them and keep things unchanged.
This story takes place in 1993, in New York City., and is told in the first person P.O.V. of Lucy, who is half Jewish and half Italian - and she is definitely not your typical teenager. She is a basketball prodigy, in her senior year at a private high school, and she can "trash talk" with the worst of the guys. And yes, as her story unfolds, you suspect that she has a secret crush on her best friend, Percy - who is a stereotypical rich, good-looking playboy; and yes, you would be right in assuming that things eventually get hot and heavy between them. But there is no spoiler alert needed here, because this is NOT a standard YA trope-filled novel. Instead, you continue to read with bated breath and hope that Lucy listens to her older (artist) friends when they tell her "No one ever loves someone the way people are loved in poetry. You have to find a more realistic standard-bearer for love, otherwise you're going to spend the rest of your life very disappointed."
I felt like cheering when Lucy finally puts her failed hook-up with Percy behind her and says, "It's a sad day when you finally realize that not everyone you love has to love you back. It's a lesson I keep on forgetting I've learned before." And then, further on in the story, comes one of my favorite lines: "Dear Percy, you will always be my very favorite optical illusion."
This novel is full of beautiful gems like this:
"I didn't get a happy ending. But nothing really tragic or even vaguely sad happened either. The universe didn't punish me for having sex with a guy I knew was a jerk. There wasn't a loaded consequence. Nothing grand or important came of it. I fell in love with a boy, and he didn't love me back, and that's pretty much the whole story."
Except, of course, that it is not. The events in this story are just a small slice out of young Lucy's life: she is an intelligent, daring and life-embracing girl who chooses to have faith that there is more to life than Percy's nihilistic, anti-establishment philosophies. There is a bit of Lucy in all of us - and you will be so proud of her when you reach the final paragraph of this really excellent novel. (I know I had a huge smile on my face at the end!) Beautifully and truthfully written - what more can you ask for? Do yourself a favor and read this book!
My thanks to the author, the publisher and NetGalley for an ARC of this book in exchange for an honest review.