Classic Connections, one of my favorite units in my book , involves modern young adult authors retelling a classic story in a modern setting or using elements of a classic in a modern tale. Recently, I have read three YA novels that incorporate the myth of Persephone and Hades in the story. In the Greek myth Persephone, daughter of the Greek gods Zeus and Demeter, is abducted by Hades, the god of the underworld. Demeter is distraught and convinces Zeus to intervene. Zeus says that Persephone may return to earth if she has not eaten anything, but Hades woos her with a six seeds of a pomegranate. A compromise is reached in which Persephone spends 6 months a year with Hades and 6 months on earth. Demeter refuses to let plant life grow during the 6 months Persephone is gone, thus explaining the seasons. Meg Cabot's Abandon, Aimee Carter's The Goddess Test, and Emily Whitman's Radiant Darkness, all involve the myth of Persephone.
In Meg Cabot's Abandon, the first book in a proposed trilogy, Pierce and her mother have moved to Isla Huesos in South Florida after Pierce nearly drowns in a swimming pool. Due to the pool’s frigid temperature, she is resuscitated, but not before she makes a trip to the Underworld and meets John, who doesn't want to let her go. In Isla Huesos, which happens to be a portal to the Underworld, she reconnects with her mother's family and starts school, but John seems to be monitoring her every move. She tells him to leave her alone and returns a necklace that he gave her while she was in the Underworld. But does she really mean it? The sequel, entitled Underworld, will be published in summer 2012.
The Goddess Test introduces Kate Winters, whose main interest is spending time with her dying mother, who has convinced her to move to her home town of Eden, Michigan. Kate meets several teenagers at school and agrees to attend a party with Ava, to please her mother who wants Kate to make a life for herself without her. When Ava has a fatal accident, the mysterious Henry appears and agrees to save her if Kate will spend each autumn and winter with him at Eden Manor. Kate ultimately finds out Henry is actually the god of the Underworld, and he wants her to take the place of his ex-wife Persephone. Kate must pass seven tests in order to become Queen of the Underworld. Eleven girls before her have died trying and if she fails, Henry will fade from existence. At first Kate is furious but as she begins to fall for Henry, she realizes becoming his wife will not only save him, but herself as well.
My favorite is Emily Whitman's Radiant Darkness, which is a more faithful retelling of the original myth. This story finds Persephone a willing accomplice in her abduction by Hades. Persephone is the bored teenage daughter of Demeter, the earth goddess who rules an all female realm. When Hades appears in a secluded meadow and begins to woo Persephone, she is more than willing to elope with him. In the Underworld Persephone spends her time gardening and working on the greeting process for the newly arrived dead. However Demeter is furious about the supposed abduction of her daughter and is causing drought and famine on earth. When Persephone discovers the trouble she's caused, she convinces Hades and Demeter to compromise and allow her to spend six months on earth and six months in the Underworld.
Popular novels with classic connections can be paired with the originals for comparison. Exposing kids to plots that form the backbone of literature will help them appreciate the clever variations that the modern authors imagine. Next up on my list of must reads is Falling for Hamlet by Michelle Ray.
Thursday, July 21, 2011
Tuesday, June 21, 2011
Flip
The question posed on the back of my galley copy of FLIP by Martyn Bedford asks "What does it mean to have a soul whose will to live knows no limits? " This question peeked my interest, as well as the personal letter from Wendy Lamb of Wendy Lamb Books, which mentioned how hot this book was at auction and how excited she is to be publishing it. The book did not disappoint!
As the story begins, Alex Gray wakes up to find himself in another boy's body. Suddenly, asthmatic, clarinet playing Alex finds himself inhabiting the body of Phillip Garamond or Flip, an athletic girl magnet. Alex says, "Being Flip was like playing the lead in a film about a special agent assigned to work undercover...Except in a movie the agent would be thoroughly prepared for the operation. Provided a dossier of information, told to memorize every detail of the false ID which had been created for him...Only then would he be sent out to the field...ready to handle any tricky situations without blowing his cover." Needless-to-say, Alex has a lot of trouble negotiating Flip's persona. He immediately tries to contact his mother who is 200 miles away. Her co-worker, who answers the call, thinks he's an evil prank caller, as does his best friend David, whom he tries to contact next. He begins to suspect that Alex is dead. When he steals money and takes a train back to his own home, he is apprehended by the police, after trying to make contact with his family. He finds out that Alex is in a persistent vegetative state and returns to Flip's home and parents, who worry that their son is mentally ill.
Alex is heartened by the idea that he might be able to find a way back into his own body, so that Flip can once again inhabit his. After doing some internet investigation, Alex makes contact with Rob who tells him he is a victim of psychic evacuation. At the moment near death, his soul moved into a new body. Most psychic evacuees, who inhabit a new body, have died in their previous incarnation. Alex is one of the few who may have a chance to reverse the process. Rob, also a psychic evacuee, takes Alex under his wing and tries to counsel him to accept his new body and move on. Alex, however, refuses to lose hope and continues to struggle to reclaim his former life.
Although this book is being billed by some as a new Freaky Friday, it is so much deeper than that.The author explores questions such as What is a soul? What happens to it when the host body dies? Bedford, who is the author of five novels for adults, also poses a detailed explanation as to how Alex came to inhabit Flip's body. This is his first young adult novel, but I would highly recommend this page turner for young and old alike.
As the story begins, Alex Gray wakes up to find himself in another boy's body. Suddenly, asthmatic, clarinet playing Alex finds himself inhabiting the body of Phillip Garamond or Flip, an athletic girl magnet. Alex says, "Being Flip was like playing the lead in a film about a special agent assigned to work undercover...Except in a movie the agent would be thoroughly prepared for the operation. Provided a dossier of information, told to memorize every detail of the false ID which had been created for him...Only then would he be sent out to the field...ready to handle any tricky situations without blowing his cover." Needless-to-say, Alex has a lot of trouble negotiating Flip's persona. He immediately tries to contact his mother who is 200 miles away. Her co-worker, who answers the call, thinks he's an evil prank caller, as does his best friend David, whom he tries to contact next. He begins to suspect that Alex is dead. When he steals money and takes a train back to his own home, he is apprehended by the police, after trying to make contact with his family. He finds out that Alex is in a persistent vegetative state and returns to Flip's home and parents, who worry that their son is mentally ill.
Alex is heartened by the idea that he might be able to find a way back into his own body, so that Flip can once again inhabit his. After doing some internet investigation, Alex makes contact with Rob who tells him he is a victim of psychic evacuation. At the moment near death, his soul moved into a new body. Most psychic evacuees, who inhabit a new body, have died in their previous incarnation. Alex is one of the few who may have a chance to reverse the process. Rob, also a psychic evacuee, takes Alex under his wing and tries to counsel him to accept his new body and move on. Alex, however, refuses to lose hope and continues to struggle to reclaim his former life.
Although this book is being billed by some as a new Freaky Friday, it is so much deeper than that.The author explores questions such as What is a soul? What happens to it when the host body dies? Bedford, who is the author of five novels for adults, also poses a detailed explanation as to how Alex came to inhabit Flip's body. This is his first young adult novel, but I would highly recommend this page turner for young and old alike.
Tuesday, June 7, 2011
Dash and Lily's Book of Dares
While researching information for leading a talk back for the film Tiny Furniture at the Boedecker Theater, I found that the film maker, Lena Dunham, has been hired to write and direct Dash and Lily's Book of Dares for Scott Rudin. Coincidentally, I had just finished the book by Rachel Cohn and David Levithan, who also wrote Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist. Once again the story is told in alternating chapters with Rachel writing Lily's perspective and David voicing Dash's.
The story begins when Lily leaves a red moleskin notebook with a list of literary clues in the stacks of the Strand Bookstore in New York City. Dash, a bookish sixteen-year-old, finds it and takes the challenge to follow the clues, leaving some of his own. Both teens are on their own for the Chrismas holidays. Dash has duped his divorced parents each into thinking he is spending the holiday with the other parent, and Lily has been left in the care of her older brother while their parents take a second honeymoon. Lily challenges, “Are you going to be playing for the pure thrill of unreluctant desire?" and a bored and lonely Dash responds enthusiastically, following the clues to crowded venues to pick up messages. As the dares continue, the two teens learn more and more about each other from the pages of the notebook, and they begin to fall in love. When they finally meet under terrible circumstances, it is not the romantic interlude the reader expects. The rest of the story is spent with the two working toward a second chance at making a first impression. Well-read teens will love the words, thoughts, and emotions that these two unique characters convey.
The story begins when Lily leaves a red moleskin notebook with a list of literary clues in the stacks of the Strand Bookstore in New York City. Dash, a bookish sixteen-year-old, finds it and takes the challenge to follow the clues, leaving some of his own. Both teens are on their own for the Chrismas holidays. Dash has duped his divorced parents each into thinking he is spending the holiday with the other parent, and Lily has been left in the care of her older brother while their parents take a second honeymoon. Lily challenges, “Are you going to be playing for the pure thrill of unreluctant desire?" and a bored and lonely Dash responds enthusiastically, following the clues to crowded venues to pick up messages. As the dares continue, the two teens learn more and more about each other from the pages of the notebook, and they begin to fall in love. When they finally meet under terrible circumstances, it is not the romantic interlude the reader expects. The rest of the story is spent with the two working toward a second chance at making a first impression. Well-read teens will love the words, thoughts, and emotions that these two unique characters convey.
Sapphique
Of all the series optioned for film, Catherine Fisher's Incarceron and its sequel Sapphique seem the most cinematically challenging to me. I am really interested to see what the screenwriters, Bill Collage and Adam Cooper, will do with this steam punk story. Taylor Lautner, who plays the werewolf Jacob in the Twilight series, will play Finn, who has been trapped in Incarceron, a sentient futuristic prison. He finds a crystal key which allows him to communicate with Claudia, the daughter of the Warden, who lives outside Incarceron. However, Claudia is trapped in her own prison, a world designed to look like the 17th Century. Technology is outlawed and society has returned to a feudal time including arranged marriages. When the Queen and Claudia's father tell her she has to marry the dolt who is the heir to the throne, Claudia vows to do whatever it takes to avoid her fate. She knows nothing of Incarceron except that it exists, but when she and Finn begin to communicate, she believes he is Giles, her long lost fiance. They hatch a plan for Finn to escape and claim his throne.
The sequel Sapphique picks up where Incarceron ended with Finn on the Outside with Claudia and her tutor Jared, trying to prove that he is the rightful heir to the throne. His oathbrother Kiero and friend Attia are still trapped inside the prison, trying to find a way out. Incarceron itself is hunting for an object known as Sapphique's glove that may help it attain a human body so it can escape from the prison. Attia and Kiero meet up with Claudia's father the Warden, and the three attempt to thwart the prison's plans. Meanwhile, on the Outside, a Pretender, hired by the evil Queen, is threatening to usurp the throne and destroy the Kingdom. While Claudia and Finn are dealing with that intrigue, Jared is still trying to find the Portal between Incarceron and the Outside. Although the major plot lines are resolved, the possibility of another book to explore the repercussions of what happens has not been ruled out by the author.
Even though the world Catherine Fisher imagines is very creative, I had some problems suspending my disbelief as I was reading. I'm wondering how film makers are going to portray a living breathing prison which is the size of a watch fob. Watching the MTV movie awards last night and hearing the girls scream every time Taylor Lautner's abs were shown, I'm sure the film makers will come up with something.
The sequel Sapphique picks up where Incarceron ended with Finn on the Outside with Claudia and her tutor Jared, trying to prove that he is the rightful heir to the throne. His oathbrother Kiero and friend Attia are still trapped inside the prison, trying to find a way out. Incarceron itself is hunting for an object known as Sapphique's glove that may help it attain a human body so it can escape from the prison. Attia and Kiero meet up with Claudia's father the Warden, and the three attempt to thwart the prison's plans. Meanwhile, on the Outside, a Pretender, hired by the evil Queen, is threatening to usurp the throne and destroy the Kingdom. While Claudia and Finn are dealing with that intrigue, Jared is still trying to find the Portal between Incarceron and the Outside. Although the major plot lines are resolved, the possibility of another book to explore the repercussions of what happens has not been ruled out by the author.
Even though the world Catherine Fisher imagines is very creative, I had some problems suspending my disbelief as I was reading. I'm wondering how film makers are going to portray a living breathing prison which is the size of a watch fob. Watching the MTV movie awards last night and hearing the girls scream every time Taylor Lautner's abs were shown, I'm sure the film makers will come up with something.
Wednesday, June 1, 2011
City of Fallen Angels
According to the Entertainmently Weekly article, Find Me a Twilight, some industry insiders think Cassandra Clare's Mortal Instrument series is the most likely to "inherit the Twilight mantle," because it has the biggest fan base online. Lily Collins, a British-American actress and television personality, is cast as Clary Fray, a young girl who learns about the supernatural from Jace, a boy who is characterized as "Edward with attitude." Four books in the projected six book series are currently available.
City of Bones is the first book in the series, which is filled with vampires, werewolves, fairies and demons. When Clary Fray witnesses three tattoo-covered teenagers murder another teen, she is bewildered because the victim disappears and no one else can see the killers. Then she learns that the teens are Shadowhunters, humans who hunt and kill demons, and she can see them because she is a shadowhunter whose skills are just emerging. Shortly after this her mother is kidnapped, and Clary finds out that her mother is also a Shadowhunter and the only one who knows the location of The Mortal Cup, a dangerous magical item that turns humans into Shadowhunters. Clary and her friend Simon are drawn into a world filled with danger and intrigue, where renegade Shadowhunters led by the evil Valentine are trying to kill all non humans. Romantic tension is created when Simon declares his love for Clary, only to find out Clary is in love with one of the Shadowhunters named Jace. However, as the first book draws to a close, Clary finds out that not only is she Valentine's daughter but Jace is supposedly Valentine's son.
The sequel City of Ashes finds Clary’s mother in a magically induced coma. Clary’s only hope of helping her mother is to hunt down her father, the evil Valentine. To complicate matters, someone in New York City is murdering vampire, werewolf and faerie children. Is Valentine behind the killings -- and if he is, what is he trying to do? When the second of the Mortal Instruments, the Soul-Sword, is stolen, the terrifying Inquisitor suspects Clary’s brother Jace. Clary wonders if Jace is willing to betray everything he believes in to help their father?
In City of Glass, the book which was originally advertised as the final installment of the Mortal Instrument series, Clary goes to the City of Glass in search of a remedy for her dying mother. There she gets involved in a battle between the Shadow hunters and Valentine’s army of demons in a last ditch effort to save the world. Romantic issues are resolved and surprising relationships are revealed in what was supposed to be a satisfying ending to the popular series.
After beginning a prequel series with the book Clockwork Angel (see 10/26/10 blog) , the author then announced she would write three more installments of the Mortal instruments series. In the fourth book, City of Fallen Angels which was released in April, the mortal war is over and Clary is training to be a shadow hunter. However, the peace between the shadow hunters and the downworlders is broken when someone begins murdering shadow hunters. Simon, who is attempting to adjust to life as a vampire, seems to be at the center of the conflict. Jace and Clary once again are pulled apart when Jace begins having dreams about killing Clary.
Personally, I thought this terrific series should have ended with City of Glass, which tied up all loose ends and brought the lovers together. As I was reading City of Fallen Angels, I found myself annoyed with the story line, and not really caring about the characters any more. However, fans of the series may be thrilled to have three more books, which I consider to be a retread of the original story.
City of Bones is the first book in the series, which is filled with vampires, werewolves, fairies and demons. When Clary Fray witnesses three tattoo-covered teenagers murder another teen, she is bewildered because the victim disappears and no one else can see the killers. Then she learns that the teens are Shadowhunters, humans who hunt and kill demons, and she can see them because she is a shadowhunter whose skills are just emerging. Shortly after this her mother is kidnapped, and Clary finds out that her mother is also a Shadowhunter and the only one who knows the location of The Mortal Cup, a dangerous magical item that turns humans into Shadowhunters. Clary and her friend Simon are drawn into a world filled with danger and intrigue, where renegade Shadowhunters led by the evil Valentine are trying to kill all non humans. Romantic tension is created when Simon declares his love for Clary, only to find out Clary is in love with one of the Shadowhunters named Jace. However, as the first book draws to a close, Clary finds out that not only is she Valentine's daughter but Jace is supposedly Valentine's son.
The sequel City of Ashes finds Clary’s mother in a magically induced coma. Clary’s only hope of helping her mother is to hunt down her father, the evil Valentine. To complicate matters, someone in New York City is murdering vampire, werewolf and faerie children. Is Valentine behind the killings -- and if he is, what is he trying to do? When the second of the Mortal Instruments, the Soul-Sword, is stolen, the terrifying Inquisitor suspects Clary’s brother Jace. Clary wonders if Jace is willing to betray everything he believes in to help their father?
In City of Glass, the book which was originally advertised as the final installment of the Mortal Instrument series, Clary goes to the City of Glass in search of a remedy for her dying mother. There she gets involved in a battle between the Shadow hunters and Valentine’s army of demons in a last ditch effort to save the world. Romantic issues are resolved and surprising relationships are revealed in what was supposed to be a satisfying ending to the popular series.
After beginning a prequel series with the book Clockwork Angel (see 10/26/10 blog) , the author then announced she would write three more installments of the Mortal instruments series. In the fourth book, City of Fallen Angels which was released in April, the mortal war is over and Clary is training to be a shadow hunter. However, the peace between the shadow hunters and the downworlders is broken when someone begins murdering shadow hunters. Simon, who is attempting to adjust to life as a vampire, seems to be at the center of the conflict. Jace and Clary once again are pulled apart when Jace begins having dreams about killing Clary.
Personally, I thought this terrific series should have ended with City of Glass, which tied up all loose ends and brought the lovers together. As I was reading City of Fallen Angels, I found myself annoyed with the story line, and not really caring about the characters any more. However, fans of the series may be thrilled to have three more books, which I consider to be a retread of the original story.
Tuesday, May 31, 2011
New Young Adult Film Series - Divergent
The Hunger Games movie, which has a March 23, 2012 release date, made the cover of Entertainment Weekly last week! In addition to pages and pages about this upcoming film and its sequels, there was an article about all the young adult series that are being adapted for film, in the hope of finding the next hit franchise. In Find Me a Twilight, Sara Vilkomerson and Stephan Lee take a look at several series the studios are swooning over. Allie Condie's Matched series (see 12/2/10 blog), Maggie Stiefvaters Wolves of Mercy Falls series (see 3/11/10 blog), Cassandra Clare's Mortal Instruments series, Lauren Oliver's Delirium series, and Catherine Fisher's Incarceron series will soon be making their way to a theater near you. Veronica Roth's Divergent, which came out earlier this month, is also slated for the silver screen.
Set in a dystopian Chicago, Divergent is about a futuristic world where all people are born into one of five factions which have a different strength and focus: Abnegation (service), Amity (friendship), Candor (truth), Dauntless (fearlessness) or Erudite (intellect). On their sixteenth birthday, teens take an aptitude test and can choose to remain with their factions or change allegiances. The main character Tris chooses to leave behind her gray robes and loving Abnegation family to become one of the tattooed and reckless Dauntless, a choice even she doesn't understand. As she begins the Dauntless training, that is much like a violent military boot camp, Tris discovers that only ten of the trainees will be accepted into the final group. Although she appears small and child like, she succeeds beyond her wildest dreams and begins to make enemies and form alliances; her demanding instructor "Four" takes particular interest in her that evolves from protectiveness to love. What Tris doesn't know is that much of her success is because she is actually a Divergent, with the strengths of multiple factions. This makes her a target of the merciless autocratic leaders who kill divergents because they are hard to control. As in all dystopian literature, Tris and her friends fight the status quo in hopes of creating a "brave new world," where all inhabitants live in harmony.
The first of a trilogy, Divergent, has a satisfying ending, but sets up the conflict for the future. The book is an action packed page turner with descriptions of Tris's initiation process which are as riveting as they are violent. The tender romance between Tris and Four will have readers coming back for more. Due to the graphic violence, I would recommend Divergent for more mature readers
Set in a dystopian Chicago, Divergent is about a futuristic world where all people are born into one of five factions which have a different strength and focus: Abnegation (service), Amity (friendship), Candor (truth), Dauntless (fearlessness) or Erudite (intellect). On their sixteenth birthday, teens take an aptitude test and can choose to remain with their factions or change allegiances. The main character Tris chooses to leave behind her gray robes and loving Abnegation family to become one of the tattooed and reckless Dauntless, a choice even she doesn't understand. As she begins the Dauntless training, that is much like a violent military boot camp, Tris discovers that only ten of the trainees will be accepted into the final group. Although she appears small and child like, she succeeds beyond her wildest dreams and begins to make enemies and form alliances; her demanding instructor "Four" takes particular interest in her that evolves from protectiveness to love. What Tris doesn't know is that much of her success is because she is actually a Divergent, with the strengths of multiple factions. This makes her a target of the merciless autocratic leaders who kill divergents because they are hard to control. As in all dystopian literature, Tris and her friends fight the status quo in hopes of creating a "brave new world," where all inhabitants live in harmony.
The first of a trilogy, Divergent, has a satisfying ending, but sets up the conflict for the future. The book is an action packed page turner with descriptions of Tris's initiation process which are as riveting as they are violent. The tender romance between Tris and Four will have readers coming back for more. Due to the graphic violence, I would recommend Divergent for more mature readers
Labels:
Divergent,
Veronica Roth,
young adult film series
Sunday, April 10, 2011
Where She Went
In my "Connecting with Young Adult Novels" workshop at the Teen Literature Conference, I talked about using essential questions to encourage kids to think critically about their reading. One of the essential questions discussed was "How do people overcome adversity?" In addition to seeking justice, doing good works for others and getting support from loved ones, we discussed people pouring themselves into their passions, such as music or art, for solace. No better example can be found to support this idea, than Gale Forman's Where She Went, the sequel to her New York Times best seller If I Stay. Having just finished Where She Went, I am still basking in the euphoria of reading an amazingly powerful and well-written novel.
For those of you who have not read If I Stay, you are in for a double dose of wonderful. Mia, a talented cellist and her family are in the family car when a truck broadsides them, leaving her parents dead and 17-year-old Mia in critical condition. After the accident Mia is standing outside her body beside the wreckage of their car and her parents' corpses, watching herself and her little brother being loaded into the ambulance. As she ponders her state, ("Am I dead? I actually have to ask myself this.") Mia is transported to a hospital where she lies in a coma and reflects on the past and tries to decide whether to fight to live. Through flashbacks, flash-forwards and out-of-body reports on what is going on around her, Mia analyzes the situation. Adam, her boyfriend who leaves his punk rock band's concert to be with her, arrives at the hospital. As he sits by her side, he begs her to stay saying, "If you stay, I'll do whatever you want...I'll even let you go. If you stay."
In Where She Went the story flashes forward three years. Mia is pouring herself into her music career at Julliard, and Adam is a rock star who is close to a nervous breakdown. After Mia goes to New York, she inexplicably stops communicating with Adam, sending him into a deep depression that results in him writing songs for a new album that sky rockets his band to fame and fortune. The album "Collateral Damage" tells Adam and Mia's story. Adam is in New York, dreading his upcoming world tour to support the band's new album, when he happens upon a poster for her concert at Carnegie Hall. Thinking no one will recognize him, he watches the concert from a balcony seat, only to be asked by an usher at the end of the concert to meet Mia backstage. Their reunion is filled with supressed emotion as they spend the rest of the night wandering New York City. When she ultimately reveals the reason she left him, it sparks a cathartic reconnection which is expressed through their music.
Where She Went is a first person narrative told from Adam's point of view. Lyrics from "Collateral Damage" songs that preface many of the chapters are heart breaking, revealing the trajectory of Adam and Mia's relationship. In the band's anthem, "Animate," Adam sings, "First you inspect me, then you dissect me, then you reject me. I wait for the day that you'll resurrect me." Where She Went is the story of that resurrection.
For those of you who have not read If I Stay, you are in for a double dose of wonderful. Mia, a talented cellist and her family are in the family car when a truck broadsides them, leaving her parents dead and 17-year-old Mia in critical condition. After the accident Mia is standing outside her body beside the wreckage of their car and her parents' corpses, watching herself and her little brother being loaded into the ambulance. As she ponders her state, ("Am I dead? I actually have to ask myself this.") Mia is transported to a hospital where she lies in a coma and reflects on the past and tries to decide whether to fight to live. Through flashbacks, flash-forwards and out-of-body reports on what is going on around her, Mia analyzes the situation. Adam, her boyfriend who leaves his punk rock band's concert to be with her, arrives at the hospital. As he sits by her side, he begs her to stay saying, "If you stay, I'll do whatever you want...I'll even let you go. If you stay."
In Where She Went the story flashes forward three years. Mia is pouring herself into her music career at Julliard, and Adam is a rock star who is close to a nervous breakdown. After Mia goes to New York, she inexplicably stops communicating with Adam, sending him into a deep depression that results in him writing songs for a new album that sky rockets his band to fame and fortune. The album "Collateral Damage" tells Adam and Mia's story. Adam is in New York, dreading his upcoming world tour to support the band's new album, when he happens upon a poster for her concert at Carnegie Hall. Thinking no one will recognize him, he watches the concert from a balcony seat, only to be asked by an usher at the end of the concert to meet Mia backstage. Their reunion is filled with supressed emotion as they spend the rest of the night wandering New York City. When she ultimately reveals the reason she left him, it sparks a cathartic reconnection which is expressed through their music.
Where She Went is a first person narrative told from Adam's point of view. Lyrics from "Collateral Damage" songs that preface many of the chapters are heart breaking, revealing the trajectory of Adam and Mia's relationship. In the band's anthem, "Animate," Adam sings, "First you inspect me, then you dissect me, then you reject me. I wait for the day that you'll resurrect me." Where She Went is the story of that resurrection.
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