Wednesday, October 26, 2016

Fat Angie by e.E. Charlton-Trujillo

Image result for fat angieFat Angie by e.E. Charlton-Trujillo is another moving young adult lit. novel that rotates on the axis of acceptance.  Angie, who is struggling to survive in the wake of her sister’s disappearance, can barely find the strength to exist.  She is brutally bullied by her peers, her brother, and even her own mother.  She refuses to accept the reality that her sister is dead.  And, she has allowed her self-talk to eat away at the person she wants to be, the person she can be.  She sees only Fat Angie.  Until…she meets K.C. Romance.  Beautiful, strong, tattoo-laden, gay-girl-gay K.C. notices her and sees, really sees Angie.  Buoyed by her relationship with the fragile, yet durable, K.C., Angie finds the strength to pick herself up and live again.    

The story is moving.  The characters are strong.  The writing style is both beautiful and painful at the same time.  I hurt for Angie, K.C., and even Wang.  I wanted to hurt for Angie’s mom, but I just couldn’t because I could not forgive her for what she did to her daughter(s).  I was actually even a little angry with e.E. because the narrator called Angie Fat Angie for a good part of the book.  I hated that.  I wanted it to stop.  Of course, the brilliance is that is does begin to stop as Angie begins to see herself as more than Fat Angie.  I was so thankful for the hopeful ending.  No, it’s not rainbows and lollipops, but “she was happy” (p. 264).  That is what we want in life, right?  We want to be happy amid the chaos, the pain, and the uncertainty.  After taking the reader on a roller-coaster of emotional ups and downs, e.E. grants this small kernel of hope…happiness.  

This is definitely a book for teens who are struggling.  The book is packed full of the gamut of struggles: body image, rejection, bullying, cutting, sexual identity, fitting in, being an individual, abusive parents, uncaring adults (who are supposed to care)…  The struggles are real.  e.E. does not hide it; however, the book gives kids a safe place to explore the pain of the struggles and see that glimmer of hope at the end.  What a great book for classroom conversations as well; even for the bully, the bigot, etc.  As Stacy Ann showed us in the book, they are struggling too.  Books like these, as I have said many times before, make us better people; readers cannot walk away without a new understanding of how others feel when they are bound by the chains of the struggle.  Books like these cause us to think twice about what we say to people who are being strangled by the struggle.  Too bad Connie did not have a book like this to read (read the book; it will make sense then).    
Fat Angie by e.E. Charlton-Trujillo, 264 pages from Candlewick Press (2013). ISBN # 978-0-7636-6119-9
Ideal for young adult readers (and especially parents of teens who are struggling)


Dumplin' by Julie Murphy



Oh my goodness! I loved Dumplin’ by Julie Murphy.  I loved, loved it.  

Image result for dumplin 
This book is girl power on steroids.  Willowdean is great!  Will is a beautiful character.  She is witty and introspective and loves Lucy and Dolly Parton fiercely.  She is small-town warm and smart.  She is everything I wish I could have been when I was growing up awkwardly in that small town where everyone knows everything about you.  

Of course, she is struggling.  She wrestles with weight, and naturally, her mother is a slim beauty pageant alum. who just so happens to run the local (a very big deal in a small Texas town) beauty pageant.  Picture Willowdean with a bag of chips.  Now, picture the look on her mom’s razor-thin face of perfection.  Yep, that is Will’s relationship with her mom.  Maybe out of spite, or maybe out of reverence to her recently deceased, favorite aunt, Lucy, Will gathers a posse of other so-called misfit girls who want to show the world that anyone can be beautiful, and they enter the pageant.  That decision costs her a lot.  Does she find that it was worth it?  Does she win?  Read it to see.

Wait, if that is not enough to entice you.  What about romance?  Pick-up truck, high-school-making-out kind of steamy romance.  Imagine it, that picture-perfect hunk of a guy from the private school flipping burgers every night with you at your after-school job.  He’s beautiful; he’s perfect, and he is hot for Will.  She wants him so badly, but can she find the confidence to go for it?  Will she be able to overcome her perception that the fat girl never gets the hot guy?  Read it to see. 

I am so thankful to Julie Murphy for writing this book.  The story and characters are engrossing.  I loved and hated them every step of the way.  I was up and down as the plot unfolded.  Those are all of the feelings that I, as a reader, want when living through contemporary realistic fiction.  I want to be there with the characters.  I want to feel their pain and revel in their triumphs and feel the butterflies in my stomach as new romance emerges.  I cannot wait for other girls to find power through Will’s story.  It is such a great read.      
Dumplin’ by Julie Murphy, 375 pages from Balzer + Bray, HaperCollins (2015). ISBN # 978-0-06-232718-5
Ideal for female, teen readers (and old women like me who want to be a teen again)