Skip to main content

ONE MOMENT by Kristina McBride


copyright date: June 2012
primarily marketed for: young adults (14 and up)

“We spent the rest of the evening together, hanging out in my room, my mother telling my father and me the stories behind each and every one of those worn swatches of fabric.  As I listened, losing myself in each little tale, I realized that the quilt would not have been the same, not nearly as beautiful, without the sadness.  The robin’s egg blue patch from a baby blanket that had belonged to my uncle who died when he was two, the purple satin ribbon found after a tornado destroyed my grandparents’ first home, the black silk from the dress my grandma wore to her father’s funeral—those slices of life, they were just as important as the rest.”
-a taste of the amazing book One Moment by Kristina McBride

Thanks to my friend Ruth, I am a Kristina McBride junkie.  After reading her amazing first novel, The Tension of Opposites, I was excited to hear she had a new book coming out.  When I finally started One Moment, I stopped reading only to sleep overnight and wake up early to finish the story. 

Maggie and her friends, Shannon, Tanna, Adam, Peter, and her boyfriend Joey have grown up together.  They are so close that they borrow each other’s clothes and can count on each other for anything.  As the end of the their junior year approaches, it seems they are on top of the world.  Until one tragic day jumping the cliff at the gorge ends in tragedy. 

The book opens with the scene from the gorge.  The happiness is painted so brilliantly that you can almost taste it coming to a tragic end.  Maggie and Joey head up the trail to jump the cliff into the water together.  Only Joey is the only one who ends up jumping and Maggie is left trying to piece together her memory of what happened at the top of the cliff after his jump results in his death. 

As she struggles to regain her memory, she uncovers more truths than she bargained for, each of which is more unexpectedly painful than the last.  

The ease and tension amongst the friends is written so clearly that I wanted to hang with these characters too—even as they were going through such angst.  This is one of those rare young adult books where the parents are actually present and supportive, though of course they are unable to solve the tangled problems of this group of friends. 

Although throughout the book I had suspicions about the truth, it is never as simple as it seems.  The layers of story McBride has created will keep you guessing until the end. 

Reading Threads:
The Tension of Opposites by Kristina McBride
Twenty Boy Summer by Sarah Ockler

Comments

  1. Thankѕ for sharing уour info. Ӏ reallу aρpreciate уour efforts and I am waiting fοr your next post thаnk you once agаin.
    Here is my web blog - Nolongeryourex.com

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

I HUNT KILLERS by Barry Lyga

copyright date: April 2012 primarily marketed for: young adults (high school) I’m just going to put this out there:  I like books about death.  I didn’t know this about myself as a reader until my students this year pointed out how many of the books I booktalk (basically all of them) involve someone who died or someone who is dying. I am not sure if that is just a me thing, or if that is a common thread in books since it is such a major part of life and conflict.  I’d like to think it is the latter. At any rate, I Hunt Killers by Barry Lyga , is obviously my kind of book—it is quality literature with sophisticated vocabulary, and it is about death.  Jasper Dent, known as Jazz, is a teenager who is struggling to overcome the odds, to say the least.  His father, Billy Cornelius Dent, is the most infamous serial killer, with victims totaling triple digits.  Since his father’s arrest, Jazz has had to care for his grandmother ...

JAKE AND LILY by Jerry Spinelli

copyright date: May 2012 primarily marketed for: intermediate readers (8 and up) This is another book for younger readers.   So, although the time you spend actually reading Jake and Lily by Jerry Spinelli won’t be long, the time this story spends traveling around in your heart will be immeasurable. Spinelli is a master at getting straight to the heart of what keeps people from accepting one another: differences.   Through the story of young twins Jake and Lily, he tells a story of tolerance, acceptance, and ultimately friendship.   Jake and Lily have a very special relationship.   They are able to connect with one another through dreams and across distances.   In fact, as they write their stories for us in alternating chapters, they don’t even need to read to know what they other has written.   Conflict settles into their lives when growing up threatens to come between them.   As Jake begins to spend more time with a g...

NOTHING SPECIAL by Geoff Herbach

copyright date: May 2012 primarily marketed for: young adults (12 and up) This is Geoff Herbach 's sequel to Stupid Fast and continues Felton Reinstein’s story in true Felton fashion.   This is definitely a smart guy book—a book for smart guys, who definitely love a good chuckle. The story opens at the end of summer with Felton typing a letter to his girlfriend Aleah while flying in an airplane on his way to retrieve his younger brother from Florida.   The entire book is written as one giant letter to Aleah explaining how his summer led him to this moment in time.   After Felton and his brother Andrew got some help with their mother’s issues, Felton went right back to throwing himself into football and track—because he is stupid fast.   However, Andrew did not cope quite as well as Felton did.   Felton ignores his brother’s cries for help and continuously lets him down.   His brother ends up cooking up an elaborate plan to run ...