Nicola Yoon's Everything Everything is the story of a teenage girl, Madeline, who is allergic to absolutely everything. She can never leave her house, which was been carefully kitted out with state of the art air filtration systems, an air lock at the front door, clean white walls, even her books arrive decontaminated. Madeline is home schooled through online tutors, and her longterm nurse, Carla, checks her vitals several times through the day. The only people Madeline usually sees in person are her mum, who is a doctor, and Carla. When a new family moves in next door, she begins to speak with the son, Olly, through miming and notes held up at their windows, and then IM messages. Madeline is very wary of the dangers of the outside world due to her disease, but she is especially worried about the effects of falling in love. Narrated in first person by Madeline, this book is deals with love, trust, freedom and isolation perfectly. There were so many moments that gave me chills, and I was rooting for Madeline and any chance of freedom she could get, to live a 'normal' life.
Five things I loved about Everything Everything:
1- The references to books. Madeline reads The Little Prince over and over and gleans new meaning from it each time she does.
2- The 'reward if found' notices written in the front of each book, and the perfect way this is used in the books' ending.
3- Madeline's spoiler reviews were very funny. I think it maybe would've been cool to see a little more of her online life, as it's mentioned she has friends online, but I did love how these little snippets of her blogging were used.
4- The limitation of isolation. Having the main character unable to leave their location created this great limitation where, because things were kept simple, down to one setting, the author was able to fully explore this space and spend more time focussing on characters and development, which resulted in me really caring for the characters. Simplicity really is often the key.
5- The boy-next-door romance. Once you accept that this is in essence what the book is about, it becomes this brilliant play on a classic, where the characters do fall for each other very quickly, but through this carefully orchestrated series of interactions over various mediums.
Everywhere Everywhere is out on Sept 3 and is available for preorder on Amazon. ARC provided by NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.
Everywhere Everywhere is out on Sept 3 and is available for preorder on Amazon. ARC provided by NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.
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