While the overall story is 3 stars, the actual writing bothered me too much & made it not for me, personally. Everything that occurred was written off page, or in past tense. Instead of experiencing a moment with the character, the reader was repeatedly just told “oh btw they did x and then y”. The pacing felt really slow even though the timeline of events was quite short. A lot of speech patterns were jarring & inconsistent. The name dropping of book titles was clunky & pointless & pretentious. (WHAT teen in the entire world has A Little Princess as their favorite book??!) This probably would’ve been a book I’d have picked up at the dead of summer as an adolescent, desperate for entertainment, yet adored for the premise. The whole situation is one my teen self would’ve jealously drooled over the prospects of: a whole summer without parents? Running-at-will all over a New England island? Taking sailing lessons? With friends my own age? In a coastal nookful abode that has a pool??? For a whole summer????? SIGN. ME. UP.
I really enjoyed the idea of cousins as pals. I appreciated that they lived far apart, but still had a close relationship. It was nice to see that they were each quite different in personality, but still found ways to get along & enjoy one another. Each cousin personality was a singular personality trope, and I found that basic & lazy writing. If a preteen is going through a divorce, this story would be helpful & hopeful. I am pleased to see the overarching themes of this book being so wholesome: identity & belonging, honoring family name, respect for others, fun, friendship, acceptance, etc. And omg I cannot thank the heavens enough that finally an author made telling adults what’s going on an actual positive. I definitely want to be a cool grandma that has time for my grandkids & is a desirable home to return to & a summer oasis.
I am irrationally perpetually & forever disgruntled that Neeve’s name is not spelled Niamh, though. WHY. She is even literally Irish! What a spoiled opportunity.