Sync

Ellen Hopkins

Book - 2024

"Told in dual perspectives through unsent letters, this heartbreaking novel follows 17-year-old twins Storm and Lake, separated in the foster care system, as they each take different paths--one incarcerated and one living on the streets--and fight to find their way back to each other"--

Saved in:
1 being processed

Young Adult New Shelf Show me where

YOUNG ADULT FICTION/Hopkins Ellen
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
Young Adult New Shelf YOUNG ADULT FICTION/Hopkins Ellen (NEW SHELF) Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Young adult fiction
Novels in verse
Social problem fiction
Epistolary fiction
Published
New York : Nancy Paulsen Books 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
Ellen Hopkins (author)
Physical Description
429 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9780593463246
9780593463253
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Fraternal twins Storm and Lake enter the foster system at age 12, but they don't stay together for long and are sent to different placements. The two have always felt that they were in sync, that no matter where they were, they would always be connected. Storm is in a foster home with Jim, a pleasant, understanding man with whom he develops a strong rapport. Storm's girlfriend, Jaidyn, brings out the best in him until she is brutally attacked, and Storm's response lands him in juvenile detention. Lake has a placement in a strict Christian household, the tension of which is alleviated by fellow foster Parker, with whom Lake falls in love. But when their foster mother finds the girls in bed together, they run away and live on the streets. Both Storm and Lake are spiraling downward rapidly, but each has a moment of grace and hope at the end. Storm and Lake share Hopkins' signature lucid free-verse narrative, and while the events are heartrending, terrible, and too frequent, the siblings' resilience shows, even when they are at their lowest points.High-Demand Backstory: Hopkins is a household name in the YA literary world, and her many fans will be eager to get their hands on her latest offering.

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

Hopkins (People Kill People) employs her signature grit and compelling verse to deliver a wrenching interpretation of the foster care system. Seventeen-year-old twins Lake and Storm endured a childhood of abuse and neglect before being admitted into the California foster care system and separated from each other. Following a brief period in juvenile detention, Storm finds stability with his single foster parent as well as his girlfriend Jailyn, "who lifts the storm/ clouds and lets her light in." Meanwhile, Lake is staying with a deeply religious foster family and her fellow foster Parker, with whom she begins a secret romantic relationship. After reuniting for an afternoon, Lake and Storm are ripped apart again when their worlds simultaneously implode--Storm injures a classmate who assaulted Jailyn, and Lake's foster parents discover that she's queer. Told through letters and mental musings to each other, this haunting read weaves together instances of trauma, violence, homelessness, incarceration, and sexual assault that the siblings experience during their childhood and adolescence as they try to make their way back to each other; glimmers of kindness and love sometimes provide bright spots to their bleak reality. Characters read as white. Ages 14--up. (Aug.)

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

Gr 9 Up--Twins Storm and Lake, 17, have been tossed from one foster home to the next since facing abuse from and abandonment by their parents and grandmother. They have been each other's constant, taking care of each other and tuned into each other's feelings--in sync. In a stroke of cruelty, they are currently separated and desperate for opportunities to communicate. Readers meet Storm while he is living in a kind home, his girlfriend Jaidyn nearby. He and Lake lived happily with a foster family long ago, but the years since have been cruel to him. Life is looking up, though. Like Storm, Lake is in love. She is in an uncomfortable living situation with ultra-religious foster parents, but she also has a girlfriend: Parker, the other teen in the home. Storm and Lake's stories are told through undelivered letters the two write to each other. Their captivating voices make it all the more heartbreaking when their lives start to unravel. The two are plunged to new depths, ripped from the ones they love, and thrown into systems meant to crush them. As the characters' lives come apart, readers will ache to see Storm and Lake find salvation. This one will best fit school libraries with mature readers: depictions include teen sex and events that should never happen to any child, including sexual assault and suicide. VERDICT Written in true Hopkins style, these verses pack a punch with low word count. This story is highly accessible and will be devoured by realistic fiction readers.--Jill Shepard

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

A gritty, powerful novel in verse that follows California siblings as they navigate the foster care system. After a rough placement at age 12, twins Storm and Lake were separated by the state and haven't seen each other since. Storm has been in juvie, though he's finally settled, with a decent foster parent and a new girlfriend, Jaidyn. Lake's position living with a strict Christian family is tenuous, complicated by the fact that she's falling for her lesbian roommate, Parker. A reunion allows the 17-year-olds to reestablish "our sync"--reading each other's thoughts and body language with ease. But as quickly as they've reconnected, they're ripped apart when Storm is arrested for avenging Jaidyn's sexual assault by an ex. Lake and Parker's luck is no better; they run away and begin to deal drugs to stay afloat. The twins both hit rock bottom: Lake encounters unimaginable violence while living on the streets, and Storm is placed in a juvenile detention center yet again. Through it all, they hold on to hopes of reuniting and finding their sync again. The twins' dual perspectives are told in poignant, unflinching free verse, with natural breaks according to teenage speech patterns, and the narrative doesn't shy away from portraying the harsh realities of a broken foster care system. Though the siblings face relentless abuse and tragedy, the conclusion is ultimately hopeful, if tied up a bit too neatly. Most characters are cued white. A wrenching and necessary read. (Verse fiction. 14-18) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

STORM Are You Safe Tonight, Lake? It's my job to keep you that way. I decided that when we were three. I remember it like it was yesterday, now almost fourteen years ago. We were locked in the closet. Shivering with fear. Every time we heard Beverly's footsteps outside the door we'd shrink against the wall. You got so scared you started to hiccup. I put my arm around your shoulder. "I'll protect you," I said. "It's my job. I'm your big brother." You whispered we were twins. That made us the same age. "No," I argued. "I came out first. That makes me older." Sometimes memories like that float from the depths of my brain, ascend like buoys before submerging and sinking again. It's our birthday eve. We turn seventeen tomorrow. So of course you're on my mind. It's the last day of August. Senior year just started. I have no clue where you are, or how long you've been there. New foster placement? Longtime? My gut tells me you're not too far away. I hear from you when our caseworkers manage to intersect paths, pass on letters or cards. But I haven't seen you in five long years. Well, unless you count that one time Mom decided we should reunite. That experiment lasted three weeks. Honestly, longer than expected. It was enough time for you and me to forge our sync again. Remember how we called it that--­ the way our thoughts seemed synchronized? I wonder which high school you go to. Do you think, over the years, we were ever at the same football game, rooting for opposite teams? Are you still acing your classes? Despite all the crap in our childhood, you vowed to succeed in school, find a way to live your dreams. I'm afraid dreaming is a fool's game I quit, cold turkey, years ago. Gambling on dreams successfully requires belief in tomorrow. I can barely hold on to today. Excerpted from Sync by Ellen Hopkins All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.