No filter

Orlagh Collins

Book - 2018

Emerald's seemingly perfect life is shattered and she is sent to spend a summer with her grandmother in an isolated beach town, where she connects with Liam, who has secrets of his own.

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YOUNG ADULT FICTION/Collins Orlagh
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Young Adult Area YOUNG ADULT FICTION/Collins Orlagh Checked In
Subjects
Published
New York : Bloomsbury 2018.
Language
English
Main Author
Orlagh Collins (author)
Physical Description
355 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9781681197241
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

For 17-year-old Emerald, spending the summer in a sleepy sea village in Ireland, away from her London school pals, definitely isn't something she's going to Instagram-brag about. Especially given the secret reason she's there, which not even her best friends know about. If I didn't know me, maybe I'd believe I really lived this rosy life with all the doubt and confusion filtered out. Maybe I wouldn't notice the growing space between the me in those lovely images and the me that sits drinking tea in Grandma's kitchen, she says. But Em can't confide in anyone . . . until she meets 18-year-old Liam, who himself has more than one secret he can't reveal. Destined to become a builder like his father, but with dreams of writing songs, Liam falls for Em hard. And as the summer comes to an end, Em and Liam find out that their lives are going to be forever intertwined, even as their paths diverge. A formidable first novel for author Collins, No Filter is crisp, unexpected, and full of truths.--Lexi Walters Wright Copyright 2018 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In this touching debut novel from Irish author Collins, British 16-year-old Emerald's problems with family and friends are exacerbated by the social media feeds she can't turn away from. Emerald's mother has just entered rehab for her addition to prescription drugs, and Emerald is sent to stay with her estranged grandmother on the Irish coast for the summer. There, she meets a kindhearted boy named Liam with family troubles of his own, and the two quickly fall for each other. Told in Emerald and Liam's alternating perspectives, this novel largely focuses on their various dates and other encounters, though Emerald's story drives the narrative and Collins expands the thread of her family worries to include her grandmother and father. Though the romance doesn't offer many surprises, Collins's voices and setting are vivid and fresh, the teens' relationship is engaging, and Liam is a particularly sensitive and devoted love interest. As Emerald watches her friends' lives go on without her online, her visceral sense of pain and loss (and FOMO, really) will resonate with many readers. Ages 14-up. Agent: Marianne Gunn O'Connor. (Mar.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by School Library Journal Review

Gr 9 Up-As punishment for blowing the whistle on a bullying incident at school, Emerald Byrne is being ostracized by her popular clique, which in Instagram-land means wearing a 24/7 digital target on her back. This seems tragic, until Emerald comes home to find her mother unresponsive with an empty bottle of pills in her hands and real life comes crashing down. Suddenly, she finds herself sentenced to a summer at her grandmother's house in Ireland on a self-imposed exile from social media. An evening beach walk puts Emerald in the path of Liam Flynn, a local boy with family hardships and hidden dreams. As loves grows between these two teens from different worlds, the shared stresses of family responsibilities and the pressure of impending exam results creep in from every direction. Soon, Liam and Emerald must face the devastating facts of their families' shared histories and decide whether they can love one another without a rose-colored filter. Both a coming-of-age story and a romance, this novel weaves together issues of suicide, poverty, unrequited dreams, betrayal, and bullying into a narrative that might seem too ambitious, but is handled well by Collins. The end result is an unpretentious and enjoyable tale set against the unique backdrop of the Northern Irish coast. Readers may find the dialogue hard to follow at first, and there are several scenes of drinking and partying, but the quality of the writing makes it a justifiable addition. -VERDICT A good choice for most collections.-Sarah Lorraine, J. Sterling Morton High School, Cicero, IL © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

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

A teen who resuscitates her mother after she almost dies by suicide is packed off for the summer to the seaside in Ireland, where she falls for Liam, who lives there. Emerald is uneasy with the cruel way her social media-focused friends treat others at their English school, but she's already stretched thin trying to conceal her unhappy home life. Her busy father is constantly away, and though they've been estranged for years from her grandmother for reasons that are unclear to Emerald, it is to her home that her dad brings her when Emerald's mom begins in-patient alcohol treatment. Family tension and secrets abound for both Emerald and Liam, who are both white, and the novel alternates narration between them. The realistic, respectful, and sweet relationship that develops between the pair is sure to appeal to romance fans, and the expectation that Liam feels from his father to abandon his considerable music talent in favor of building management will be easily recognizable to many teens. Though the early theme about the pressures of social media seems to largely disappear after Emerald decides to sign off of her accounts and most elements of this drama are familiar territory, the well-drawn Irish cultural details set it apart, and a late plot twist will take many by surprise.Overall, a satisfying and romantic debut. (Romance. 14-18) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.