For all you Twilight fans pining over Jacob Black and still waiting in vain for the installment in which Jacob and Bella do hook up, meet Max & Menna. While Max and Menna are fraternal twins born in a small town in a family without a single hope, the unlikely friendships they forge teach them about things their home life does not. Things like love, acceptance, loyalty and sacrifice.
The first novel by friend and debut novelist Shauna Kelley, Max & Menna is a melancholic coming-of-age story about beating the odds and breaking free from the cycle of generational influence and rural mores that has all the shadow and mystery of Twilight sans the supernatural forces.
Although the first few pages read awkwardly like excerpts from a collegiate creative writing assignment, as the relationship between Max and Menna starts to unfold into a gentle cadence between past and present, Max & Menna quickly develops into the story of me or the story of countless latchkey-like kids who, growing up, were the product of broken homes, abuse or otherwise distracted, derelict parents. We all had a place like the Hill, whether real or imagined, and, like Max and Menna, while there, we rarely spoke of why we fled to it, as if doing so would somehow diminish its sanctuary.
Kelley aptly captures the void one feels — even into adulthood — that results from dysfunction and abandonment. The way the weight of its emptiness latches to the soul like a dense, torrid humidity.
This underlying emotion — clingy desperation, perpetual inadequacy and permanent entrapment — may be lost to readers unfamiliar with nuances of a childhood riddled with alcoholism and abuse. These depressive states are easily vanquished, though, by the feverish intensity between Nick and Menna — the new Jacob and Bella — and, even amid tragedy, the unbreakable bond of friends.
Max & Menna was published by Lucky Press on November 1, 2010! Look for it at Barnes & Noble and on Amazon!
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Those of you who know me well enough to know that these declarations are no reflection on my mother, who sacrificed herself in so many ways so that my sister and I could have the best life possible, here and the hereafter.
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