If I had a nickel for every book about a smart 12-year-old using Santa Claus technology, with tech-elf side characters, mentally ill mother figures, dead dads, themes of loss, and magic ex machina taking place at Christmas time and written by Eoin Colfer, I'd have two nickels.
And somehow the books are foils of each other. Artemis would 100% be Juniper's nemesis if they lived in the same universe. Love that, love them.
Read Juniper's Christmas if you haven't, it's great.
moodboards | juniper lane by @gyzym for @taylorcoley - happy birthday!
and yet there are little spots of green pushing their tentative way out of its barely-there branches. despite everything, it’s lived to see a second spring.
After a breakup she’d rather not talk -- or think -- about ever again, Mim Robinson has nowhere to go: distanced from her friends, estranged from most of her family, she finds herself against all odds on Juniper Lane, surrounded by an eccentric aunt and her wealthy, uptight neighbors.
Among the catty gossip and quiet rhythms of the suburbs, Mim finds herself striking up a strange, unexpected friendship with the intimidating Nadia Bahjat, the only other twenty-something on the street. Nadia, a professional chef and perennial disappointment to her parents, had to leave a promising career in the city to return home when her father grew sick -- but she’ll soon realize that her parents may not be as perfect as she’d always imagined.
A queer romance that encompasses both a cutting satire of suburban American life and a nuanced depiction of the aftermath of abuse, Juniper Lane is above all an ode to the freedom that comes from embracing the uncertainty of adulthood.
A very character focused book that I honestly enjoyed. The satire is spot-on for life in suburbia, which was amusing to read about. The dialogue is fantastic and really pulls the whole thing together. The characters and voices of Mim and Nadia are great, and their initial interactions are filled with anxiety and tension and judgment. Mim’s anxiety comes through when she speaks to other people, and it’s done so well that I often got secondhand embarrassment over a lot of it. I would say that it was a little off-putting in the beginning due to that, but I knew that was the sign of good writing, that I could feel what the characters were going through, even if it itched at my own anxiety.
The writing is fantastic and really pulled me into Mim and Nadia’s worlds.
This probably would have been five stars for me if there wasn’t a cheating storyline. Mim sleeps with a married man part of the book, and I really dislike stories and characters like that. I just don’t care for it, not my cuppa. I know Mim is recovering from the abuse of her ex-boyfriend, but even still, it just wasn’t my thing.
Mim needed another unimportant relationship to find herself and realize she deserves more, someone who actually cares about her as a person, as the person she is. I just wish that hadn’t been with someone married, though I also recognize that was a stereotype of this suburban life. Being married for show and not caring about much of anything outside of your reputation in the community, much less the person you’re sleeping with on the side. It still prickled me while reading.
Anyway, there is so much complexity to the characters, and you see how much pressure everyone is under to perform and be perfect, and how their outer facades just hide how messed up they all are. It’s amazing. The cast of supporting characters brings Juniper Lane to life in a way that feels familiar.
The romance aspect was very. . .slow burn, I guess? Nothing happened between Mim and Nadia until the very end, which would have been fine for me if I felt like the rest of the novel was pointing in that direction. It wasn’t until the last 40 pages or so that anything between them was even remotely hinted at. There’s plenty of discussion about Nadia being a lesbian and Mim comes out to her as bisexual -- and actually used that word, hallelujah! So the queer representation and the interracial relationship were all positive aspects.
But the book is billed as a queer romance, which sure, it is. But really, the story is about Mim and Nadia individually as they come to terms with their families, their selves, their pasts, and their futures. There is so much fantastic depth and humanity to these characters, their lives, and the lives of the people around them. The story was about that more than anything, though it helped at the end that these women found something meaningful and hopeful with each other. I just wish we could have seen more of that before the book abruptly ended on a wishful note of them going on a road trip together and figuring things out together.
The underdeveloped romance that seemed to happen out of nowhere at the end is the only other reason why this isn’t five stars for me. I just wanted more for their story now that they had both dealt with some frankly abusive situations. I wanted to see them actually fall in love, but I didn’t get that. I just wanted more overall, but I suppose that was me loving the characters and the whole book.
Honestly, it’s probably my favorite read of January simply for the characters and the overall story. (Also, the illustrations inside are gorgeous and I wish I could see them in color.)
-let’s be honest. you’re here for the Lesbians™. they’re here
-we’ve also got a bisexual MC for that all-round wlw goodness
-also this book focuses completely on women and that’s honestly so refreshing? you just hardly hear from the men and it’s great
-Female!!!!!!! Relationships!!!!!!!
-it’s about identity and adulthood and family and love
-one of the characters is recovering from a really bad relationship with an abusive boyfriend and to my admittedly unknowledgable opinion it’s done really well. both the topic of abuse and assault and the character’s healing process
-MC number 1: Gay and Ready to Fight. MC number 2: Bi and Tired
-two jewish characters, one of whom is an MC. a bunch of POC characters, one of whom is the other MC
-the whole book is a critique of the American suburbian WASP culture. Kady Morrison has no remorse
-the cutest shit ever? so cute
-“speaking of lesbians, where’s yours?” dying
-if you want to read about personal growth and also an adult woman fondling grapefruits in the middle of a supermarket, this book is for you
-I would die for Mimosa Robinson. yes that’s her name and she’s just as mad about it as you are
-okay I’m bad at describing but it’s beautiful go read it
She thought, once, that she liked anger, that she thrived on it. Now Nadia gets behind the wheel of her car, prettied up into the caricature of herself that her parents would prefer her to be, and knows that anger has turned her into a dangerous, frightening thing. There is a wild animal inside of her that will tear her apart if that’s what it takes to make its way outside; it’s trying already, claws gouging deep wounds into her stomach, teeth closing painfully around the ventricles of her heart. She is bleeding out across the floor of her beat-up old sedan, but she knows that if she were to cry out for help, pull over to the side of the road and flag down the nearest passersby, all they would see is a pretty young woman in high-heeled shoes and a dress that makes her look soft.