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My name is Ardis and I am an avid reader and budding writer. I want to share my love of books with others. I work with kids and am interested in finding and creating books that will ignite the reader in everyone. Contact me at: ardis.atkins@gmail.com

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Showing posts with label Jenny han. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jenny han. Show all posts
Tuesday, August 21, 2018

Book To Movie Comparison: To All The Boys I've Loved Before


To all The Boys I've Loved Before, by Jenny Han, is one of my favorite books.  A shy girl writes love letters to her crushes, never intending to send them.  Add an annoying little sister who likes to cause trouble, and suddenly, main character Lara Jean is dealing with the aftermath of five different boys thinking she is in love with them!

When I learned that the book would be made into a movie, I was overjoyed!  But often with these situations, the movie doesn't live up to the book.  Not the case here.  This was such an enjoyable watching experience, and I'd like to break down why this was.

What I Liked:
Actors/Characters:
With one notable exception, I loved the casting of this movie.   The actress who portrays Lara Jean, Lana Condor, is perfect in the role.  She plays LJ as sweet, but also dealing with anxiety over personal interactions.  I could feel the worry as LJ enters the lunch room, first when she can't find someone to sit with, then as she has all eyes on her when she is on the arm of a popular boy.


Anna Cathcart plays younger sister, Kitty.  She is wonderful, and is more likable than in the book.  I think Kitty's behavior in the book is so mean and petty that I always want to throttle her!  But in the movie, we see a different motive for Kitty to send the infamous letters out into the world.  I LOVED that!  You also see that Kitty is very caring towards Lara Jean as she keeps LJ company on a Saturday night.  I just want to hug this kid for being so compassionate. 


As Chris, Madeleine Arthur is just the right amount of rebel that I recall from the book.  In the book, Chris smokes, stays out all night, and sleeps with boys.  As befitting a light teen rom-com, the movie is more subtle about showing Chris being a non-conformist (we see Chris going off campus for Subway sandwiches).



The boys that Lara Jean has crushed on are all well cast.  Noah Centenero plays Peter as a lovable jock, but who also has more going on than athletic ability.  I loved how he and Lara Jean start out so awkwardly, but end up making a strong connection through their shared experiences of loss.


Next door neighbor Josh is also a sweet character as played by actor Israel Broussard.  He is getting over breaking up with Margo (Lara Jean's older sister).  I could feel his confusion when he realizes that Lara Jean actually had a crush on him.




What I Was Mixed About:
As much as I liked Lara Jean's friend Chris in the movie, there was also a missed opportunity.  The book and the movie definitely re-enforce that teens can have a mindset that good girls don't have sex and bad girls do.  I think in the book though, Chris is used as a bridge to show that girls can be good people AND be sexually active.  By toning down Chris's character in the movie, we miss that message. 

What I Didn't Like:
Casting:
Although the actress who plays Lara Lean's older sister, Margo, does a fine job, she looks much too old for the part.  Margo is supposed to be a college freshman in the story, but actress Janel Parrish is thirty years-old!  I wish they would have found an actress who was actually a teen to play this crucial role.  
Doesn't she look like the mom?

What Was Missing From The Movie:
Two of the things I loved about the book were missing from the movie:  Lara Jean's Korean heritage, and her obsession with making the perfect chocolate chip cookie.  The book does such a beautiful job of incorporating the rich cultural traditions that the girls' Caucasian dad attempts to impart.  But there is only a passing reference in the movie to the dad's trying to cook Korean food.  The book is also filled with Lara Jean baking cookies.  This showed how obsessive Lara Jean could be.  She would be laser-focused on every detail of a recipe and then meticulously test out each variation.  I missed this in the movie.

Overall, I found this to be a very entertaining adaptation of the book.  This is playing on Netflix so most people can easily access this movie (and play it again and again).  Don't miss a cameo from author Jenny Han as a teacher at the dance!

Rating:  




Release Date:  August 17th, 2018

Directed by:  Susan Johnson

Adaptation by:  Sofia Alvarez

Length:  99 Minutes

Platform:  Netflix streaming 

Recommendation:  A highly entertaining adaptation of a beloved book.   The movie retains the sweetness of the book along with the awkwardness of high school relationships.
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Friday, August 4, 2017

Book Review: Always and Forever, Lara Jean by Jenny Han

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/30312860-always-and-forever-lara-jean?ac=1&from_search=true
Synopsis (From Goodreads):
Lara Jean is having the best senior year a girl could ever hope for. She is head over heels in love with her boyfriend, Peter; her dad’s finally getting remarried to their next door neighbor, Ms. Rothschild; and Margot’s coming home for the summer just in time for the wedding.

But change is looming on the horizon. And while Lara Jean is having fun and keeping busy helping plan her father’s wedding, she can’t ignore the big life decisions she has to make. Most pressingly, where she wants to go to college and what that means for her relationship with Peter. She watched her sister Margot go through these growing pains. Now Lara Jean’s the one who’ll be graduating high school and leaving for college and leaving her family—and possibly the boy she loves—behind.

When your heart and your head are saying two different things, which one should you listen to?
  


Review:
The final installment of Jenny Han's series about a shy introvert who blossoms in high school is a love letter to fans of the series.  Like Lara Jean's quest to create the perfect chocolate chip cookie, the author creates a story that is soft and gooey in the center, chewy near the middle, and crisp on the edges.


                      
via GIPHY

What I Liked:
Gooey Center:
Staying with the cookie analogy, there is such warmth between Lara Jean's family.  It is one of the most lovely representations of a sweet family I have ever seen in a YA novel.  Usually, families in YA books are famously dysfunctional.  But this book highlights that some teens do experience loving parent-child, and sibling, relationships.  

That's not to say that everything is bliss in Lara Jean's world.  Her widowed father is marrying again.  And while Lara Jean is happy for her dad, her older sister, Margot, is hostile toward her future step-mom.  This causes problems for Lara Jean as she wants to be loyal to Margot, but also give Trina (her dad's fiance) a chance.  


Chewy Near The Middle:
There are some big issues facing Lara Jean as she progresses through her senior year of high school.  Will she get in to the same college as Peter?  What if her college dreams are different from her boyfriend's?  If you're trying to keep a relationship going after high school, should one person's dreams dictate how the other decides about college?  These are difficult choices that many teens will make in the waning months of high school.

Crisp On The Edges:
One big issue in the story is when (and if) Lara Jean and Peter will have sex.  While Lara Jean says she wants to, Peter questions her motives for wanting to sleep with him.  Does she really want to, or is she just trying to create a final memory before ending their romance?  I also think some of her ambivalence stems from Lara Jean's fears about becoming an adult, and the mixed signals her father gives about sex.

Lara Jean's father seems to have a hard time seeing his girls as young women, giving them some mixed messages about sex.  On the one hand, he is liberal enough to give Lara Jean a "college kit" filled with condoms, but he gets visibly uncomfortable when Margot brings her boyfriend home from college and announces they will sleep in the same room.  It seems like he wants a "don't ask, don't tell" policy about sex.   But I think in reality, most parents feel this way. 

There are also trickier issues.  Can Lara Jean and Peter make a long-distance relationship work?  Even if they wind up at the same college, will they get the true "freshman experience" if they are tied down to each other? 

I loved this part of the book because I was in a similar situation in college.  Ultimately, my boyfriend and I carried out a three year long-distance relationship while I was away at college.  I never felt deprived of the college experience because I didn't go to college to find a boyfriend!  I was there to study.  I had plenty of fun, and I was able to concentrate on my school work.  And our relationship worked out.  We have been married for 29 years!

To me, one of the main themes is the dissonance between the pressure from family and friends for Lara Jean feels to keep her options open, and the feeling that she has already found her soul mate.  While it's true that most people's high school romance will not stand the test of time, I have such affection for Lara Jean and Peter, that I hope they are the exception.

And here is my heartfelt letter to Jenny Han:

Hello Ms. Han,
In writing this series, you have created one of the most memorable love stories in all of YA.  I sighed. I cried.  And a little part of me died, knowing this was the end.  Please, please, please reconsider and keep these characters alive.  Maybe fast-forward three years and pick up on their last year of college.  Or (if they break up), have them meet ten years later and let the sparks fly!

Obviously you have created characters that feel like the reader's lifelong friends.  I cannot bear the thought that they will always and forever on the cusp of adulthood.

Sincerely,
Ardis

P.S. I still love you.                
via GIPHY


https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/30312860-always-and-forever-lara-jean

https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/always-and-forever-lara-jean-jenny-han/1123863188?ean=9781481430487
https://www.amazon.com/Always-Forever-Lara-Loved-Before/dp/1481430483/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1501824685&sr=8-1&keywords=always+and+forever+lara+jean

https://www.bookdepository.com/Always-and-Forever--Lara-Jean/9781407177663


Rating: 


 
Release Date:  May 2nd, 2017

Genre:  YA Romance

Publisher:  Simon & Schuster

Length:  336 pages

Source:  Public Library

Format:  E-Book

Recommendation:  A worthy finish to a delightful series.

 
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Sunday, June 19, 2016

Fathers in Fiction



With Father's Day here, I thought it would be great to look at depictions of dads in literature.  Fathers often get a bad rap in novels as absentee parents or worse.  I am so very grateful to my husband for being a calm, loving father to our four children.  I can always count on him to co-parent with me and give me a different perspective.

Here are some great examples of good fathers in fiction:

1. Mr. Bennett from Pride and Prejudice, by Jane Austin:



At first it would appear that the character of Mr. Bennett is too aloof and stays in his study to avoid his wife and daughters.   But I found his character to be very outside the norm of men of that time.  He actually respects his children!  His concern is not to marry them off to whomever just to get them off his hands.  He cares about whether or not his daughters actually want to be matched up with their suitors.  This would have been a revelation for this era.  I love that Mr. Bennett lets the young women lead their own lives, but intervenes when then get in over their heads, as Lydia does.

2. Dr. Covey from To All The Boys I've Loved Before, by Jenny Han:


This is the father of the main character, Lara Jean.  I really liked how the dad (who was Caucasian) made sure his daughters knew about their Korean heritage.  After his wife dies, Dr. Covey works hard to try and cook Korean dishes, and upholds New Year's Day traditions such as visiting his former In-Laws with the girls dressed in special Korean clothing.  Keeping these cultural aspects in their lives helped his daughters remember their mother.  I thought that was very sweet of him and it couldn't have been easy.

3.  Mr. Weasley from the Harry Potter series, by J.K. Rowling:


 


Arthur Weasley is the dad to the many Weasley children (Ginny, Ron, Fred, George, Percy, Charlie, and Bill).  He must work at the Wizards government Ministry of Magic, even when it is dangerous for him.  Having to make enough money to raise seven kids, and put them all through private school, must have been an enormous challenge. So he didn't have the option to quit and find a less hazardous occupation.  Both he and his wife created a loving home so that, even without a lot of luxuries, they had a very happy family life. 

4.  The dad in A Night Divided, by Jennifer A. Nielsen:



Although this character is absent for much of the book, the dad plays a very important role in the story.  This novel follows a family separated when the Berlin Wall goes up.  The dad had gone to the western part of the city with one of his sons to look for work just as The Wall goes up.  His wife and two other children are trapped in East Berlin.  Through his determination, the dad finds ways to communicate an escape plan to his children.  He never gives up trying to reunite his family, even if it will take years to do so.
  
What are your favorite fathers in fiction?  Let me know in the comments.

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Monday, November 9, 2015

Book Review: To all The Boys I've Loved Before


Synopsis (From GoodReads):

To All the Boys I’ve Loved Before is the story of Lara Jean, who has never openly admitted her crushes, but instead wrote each boy a letter about how she felt, sealed it, and hid it in a box under her bed. But one day Lara Jean discovers that somehow her secret box of letters has been mailed, causing all her crushes from her past to confront her about the letters: her first kiss, the boy from summer camp, even her sister's ex-boyfriend, Josh. As she learns to deal with her past loves face to face, Lara Jean discovers that something good may come out of these letters after all. 


Review:


A girl in high school who has never had a boyfriend instead has a series of impossible crushes.  Did author Jenny Han somehow peek inside my life?  It's been along time since those days, but this book brought me back to that wonderful, confusing time in my life.   Lara Jean is facing lots of changes in her life as her sister leaves for Scotland to attend college.  Margot always took care of all the details since their mom passed away six years ago.  Lara Jean will have to shoulder the responsibility of making sure her younger sister, Kitty, is taken care of, as well as running the household for her busy dad, a doctor.  This is also junior year in high school so she has a demanding work load.

As I read To All The Boys Iv'e Loved Before, I really felt connected to the main character.  It was much safer for me to have crushes on boys than really become involved with them.  Lara Jean is forced to confront several of her crushes when her letters to them (never meant to see the light of day) are somehow mailed.  One of her crushes is on her sisters ex-boyfriend, Josh, who lives next door.  In order to save face, she convinces another of her ex-crushes, Peter, to pretend they are dating.  But this charade may be more realistic than Lara Jean intended.

I loved the depiction of Lara Jean's home life.  Too often in YA books, the parents are regulated to background noise or are absent altogether.  This is not the case in this book.  Lara Jean's father and sisters are important parts of the story and explain much of her actions later in the book.  I also appreciated the ways in which the family tried to keep connected with their Korean heritage through food and family.

The romance in the book took a long time to simmer before boiling over, which was refreshingly realistic.  This book deals with the intense pressure teens are under to pair off and hook up before they are ready.  All teens, boys and girls, have sexual feelings, and I liked that Lara Jean started to understand that she was interested in getting closer to the boy (I won't spoil it by saying who) and how she would have mixed feelings about this.  We live in a culture that congratulates boys for scoring, while labeling girls who have sex as sluts.  These issues are a central point of the book.  I felt this was dealt with in a smart, realistic manner.

Now, I am trying to make time to read the sequel, P.S. I Still Love You.  These are entertaining, fun characters who I look forward to reading about again.


Rating:  
Source: Public Library
Format:  E-book
Recommendation: Read it for a fun, smart YA romance.
Will I read more from this author:  Yes!

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