goldkvm.blogg.se

Pet emezi review
Pet emezi review









pet emezi review

Jam's mother has a talent, a way of bringing her art to life but Jam had no way of knowing how literal this talent is. In the small, fictional town of Lucille, America, struggle heroes known as Angels are revered and life is safe and calm. Set sometime in the not-too-distant future, monsters have been rehabilitated and all of the hatred, bigotry and violence in the world has been eradicated. All she has ever known is the post-struggle life in Lucille but her parents remember the time before.Īkwaeke Emezi has created an incredibly beautiful world. Jam is the daughter of an African father and islands-descended mother. She just is and I love reading about confident, secure and principled characters like this. She is transgender but Pet is not about that, it's not even about how loving and accepting her parents were when she asserted her gender identity at the age of three.

pet emezi review

Jam is one of my favourite characters of all time. It turns out that monsters aren't always who you expected them to be. Pet features a transgender, selectively mute protagonist who unleashes a creature of justice and vengeance into a world supposedly free of monsters. I'm going to finish this review that has, to date, taken eight weeks to write and I'm going to recommend that absolutely everybody buys this for a teen (or YA lover) in their life. Nevertheless, I set myself a target of seeking out superior young adult fiction, books that are "fantastic, diverse, original, heartbreaking, uplifting, powerful, moving and inspiring" and Pet absolutely meets every one of those criteria. Akwaeke Emezi took so much care to create this world but I'm a mere reader, not a godlike genius with mad writing skills like them and I'm finding it so hard to put my thoughts into something resembling coherence and do this work of art justice. The problem I'm facing now is that I'm unsure if my review can do justice to this book. Luckily the book was shortlisted for the National Book Awards 2019 Prize for Young Adult Literature and I realised that I very much needed to read it. For some strange reason - I still can't explain it - neither the title nor description nor hardcover edition of Akwaeke Emezi's Pet appealed to me and it horrifies me to imagine how that could have meant the end for this wonderful book and me. I love books that surprise me and challenge my initial assumptions.











Pet emezi review