Friday, June 7, 2013

Review: A Different Blue by Amy Harmon

A Different Blue
Amy Harmon
Publication date: March 29th 2013
Rating: 

Goodreads - Amazon

Blue Echohawk doesn't know who she is. She doesn't know her real name or when she was born. Abandoned at two and raised by a drifter, she didn't attend school until she was ten years old. At nineteen, when most kids her age are attending college or moving on with life, she is just a senior in high school. With no mother, no father, no faith, and no future, Blue Echohawk is a difficult student, to say the least. Tough, hard and overtly sexy, she is the complete opposite of the young British teacher who decides he is up for the challenge, and takes the troublemaker under his wing.

This is the story of a nobody who becomes somebody. It is the story of an unlikely friendship, where hope fosters healing and redemption becomes love. But falling in love can be hard when you don't know who you are. Falling in love with someone who knows exactly who they are and exactly why they can't love you back might be impossible.

Blue Echohawk is a nobody.

Abandoned by her mother when she was two and raised by a drifter, she has no idea who she is. She doesn't remember her name, her parents, when she was born, or where she came from. Everything about her life and herself is based on wild guesses, but her talent to carve things out of wood, something her adoptive father taught her before he disappeared.

Needless to say, not knowing her identity makes it really difficult for Blue to feel like she belongs. So she hides behind snark remarks and faceless boys, using the way she looks in her favor. As if her only worth as a person come from how pretty others find her.

When Darcy Wilson starts teaching history at Blue's school, her life takes a different turn. The teacher first sees her as trouble, but through one of his lessons he can't help but find himself drawn and curious about who Blue Echohawk really is. Even more so when he discovers that she doesn't have a story, as least not one that's known to her.

They form a tentative friendship throughout the school year, but it's not until graduation day that Blue decides to change the path she's on. The situation she finds herself in makes it easier for her to make that choice, and  Wilson ends up becoming a really big part of Blue's resolve to truly find herself and figure out who she is as a person.

Him being by her side no matter what provides her with the stability she needs to get herself back together, and as Blue's life progresses and grows into something better she finds it's really hard to keep from seeing him as just a friend. Especially when Blue's world gets turned upside down and they both realize how strong and brave she is as she deals with everything thrown her way with her with her chin up.

I thought A Different Blue was going to be a lot better than I thought it was.

For me it was one of those books that had a really interesting premise and I was all excited about reading it, but when I actually did? Meh.

The one selling point was the fact that Blue and Wilson absolutely did not jump into a relationship. They both  had their priorities straight and had time to work on their lives before deciding to take a chance and be together. I'm really glad the author choose that path for both of them, especially considering everything Blue went through and the impact it all had in her life and in how she saw herself as a person.

The rest of it, though? Most of the book was either Blue having flashbacks about her life as a child with Jimmy Echohawk, her adoptive dad, or Wilson's history lessons.

The flashbacks are good to gives us info about how Blue learned to carve wood and why her dad is not in the picture anymore, but that's about it. There's also a interesting one where we learn about where she got her name from, but after that it just left to me like they were unnecessary to the story. Like they were just taking up page space.

For Wilson's history lessons, same thing. It was nice to read about it when the lesson itself served as a way to shake up Blue's life and make her think about things, but after a while it got tiring to have him going on and on about the subject when it had no real impact in the story whatsoever.

And the over use of Britishisms made getting through A Different Blue three times more difficult. The dialogue already felt stiff and made some of the characters sounded off, so we really didn't need to be reminded one of them was British by constantly having slangs thrown at us left and right every time he opens his mouth.

By the time I finished reading the book I wanted to congratulate myself on having the strength to go through with it. I have no doubt some people found A Different Blue and its characters to be quite a good read, but it just wasn't for me. At all.

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