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Everything beautiful is not ruined

Then. Ingrid traveled all over Europe with her opera star mother, Margot-Sophia. Life was beautiful and bright, and every day soared with music. Now. Ingrid is on a summertime wilderness survival trek for at-risk teens: addicts, runaways, and her. She's fighting to survive crushing humiliations, physical challenges that push her to her limits, and mind games that threaten to break her. Then. When the curtain fell on Margot-Sophia's singing career, they buried the past and settled into a small, painfully normal life. But Ingrid longed to let the music soar again. She wanted it so much that, for a while, nothing else mattered. Now. Ingrid is never going to make it through this summer if she can't figure out why she's here, what happened to Margot-Sophia, and why the music really stopped.

Book  - 2017
  • ISBN: 9780670070138
  • Physical Description 361 pages ; 22 cm
  • Publisher [Place of publication not identified] : [publisher not identified], 2017.

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Syndetic Solutions - Kirkus Review for ISBN Number 9780670070138
Everything Beautiful Is Not Ruined
Everything Beautiful Is Not Ruined
by Younge-Ullman, Danielle
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Kirkus Review

Everything Beautiful Is Not Ruined

Kirkus Reviews


Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

On a three-week wilderness adventure in Northern Ontario arranged by her mother, Ingrid is tested in unexpected ways.Utterly surprised when the camping trip turns out not to be cabins and day hikes but rugged hiking and canoeing, Ingrid is nonetheless determined to find her "inner Nature Girl" and prove that she's mature enough to spend her senior year at school in London, England. Ingrid punctuates her first-person narrative of the three weeks with journal entries in the form of letters to her mother, in which she sarcastically recounts the daily annoyances of the "shit hole" she finds herself in. The present-day account is interspersed with past-tense chapters detailing a childhood spent traveling around Europe with her mother, a world-famous opera star who stopped performing when Ingrid was 11. The two parts of her life seem strangely juxtaposed, but as Ingrid reflects on what brought her to this momentthe adjustment to public school in Toronto, the bullying, the message from her mother that she had no musical talent, as well as hints of some deeper emotional eventsshe begins to recognize the strength of character and leadership qualities that lie within her. With just three characters explicitly of color, Ingrid and the novel default to white. Younge-Ullman's subtle approach to narrative pacing allows readers to accompany Ingrid on her journey to fully confront and accept her past as she discovers her own true voice. (Fiction. 13-17) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Syndetic Solutions - School Library Journal Review for ISBN Number 9780670070138
Everything Beautiful Is Not Ruined
Everything Beautiful Is Not Ruined
by Younge-Ullman, Danielle
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School Library Journal Review

Everything Beautiful Is Not Ruined

School Library Journal


(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Gr 8 Up-Setting a coming-of-age story in the framework of an unwelcome wilderness expedition is a bit of a tired conceit, but in Younge-Ullman's outstanding YA novel, a teen's backwoods journey becomes exciting and emotionally engrossing. Ingrid has had an unorthodox upbringing with a single opera star mother who suffers a devastating career loss. After Mom is forced to settle into a more traditional job and life, she is almost completely derailed by deep depression. As part of a mother-daughter deal to find a healthy future for both, Ingrid is sent on a youth wilderness trip. Mostly set in the northern Ontario wilderness, the novel alternates between the "now" of the 21-day trek and the "then" of Ingrid's turbulent adjustment to settled life. Ingrid's never-sent letters to her mother appear throughout the narrative and detail her physical and emotional struggles through attacks of vampirelike mosquitoes and black flies, grueling portages, and much more challenging experiences, including an attempted sexual assault. And while the settings are vividly realized, it's the author's characterization skills that bring this narrative to life. The realistic ending makes it clear that Ingrid will overcome her difficulties and that healing is a journey and not a destination. VERDICT This compelling tale of loss and self-discovery is recommended for most libraries serving teens ages 13-plus.-Susan Riley, Mamaroneck Public Library, NY © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Syndetic Solutions - BookList Review for ISBN Number 9780670070138
Everything Beautiful Is Not Ruined
Everything Beautiful Is Not Ruined
by Younge-Ullman, Danielle
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BookList Review

Everything Beautiful Is Not Ruined

Booklist


From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.

Ingrid used to travel all over Europe and watch her vivacious opera-star mother, Margot-Sophia, headline shows and dazzle audiences. So why, at 17, is she now at a wilderness camp for at-risk teens, in the middle of nowhere, just trying to keep herself warm and dry? After surgery on her vocal cords forces Margot-Sophia to leave her opera career behind, she turns her back on music completely, despite Ingrid's attempts to draw her back to singing. When Ingrid gets the lead in her school's musical, their already fraught relationship almost breaks, as Ingrid is treading in artistic waters that Margot-Sophia has chosen to leave behind. Younge-Ullman's expert pacing and narrative style of alternating perspectives between Ingrid's younger self and present-day diary entries guide readers to understanding, along with Ingrid, that rather than being at the wilderness camp to prove something to her mother, she is there for herself. Ultimately a book about complicated family relationships and depression, this will speak to fans of Sarah Dessen.--Kling, Caitlin Copyright 2016 Booklist