safekeeper's reviews
94 reviews

The Best We Could Do by Thi Bui

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adventurous challenging dark emotional funny hopeful informative reflective sad tense slow-paced

5.0

Bare spille ball by Michael Stilson

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adventurous emotional hopeful informative sad fast-paced

3.75

Ikke helt fantastisk skrevet, men en kort og god historie og innsikt i fotballens verden på høyt nivå, med et fint persongalleri. Ikke en dårlig bok, men kunne trengt noe mer. 
Artemis by Andy Weir

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  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? It's complicated

2.5

JFC.  The Martian had some genuenely fascinating MacGuyverisms and some pretty good humour throughout, but with Artemis, Weir just wants to introduce you the reader to the finer points of welding.  That's before getting into the cardboard cut-out characters, incredibly stilted dialogue, ethnically diverse characters from all over Earth who all for some reason all talk and act like white American men, the incredibly xenophobic remark that there was no minimum age of consent on the Moon because the Moon was ethnically diverse and "no one cared who you slept with, as long as it was consensual" (WTF?), a patronizing narrator ("okay, you can stop pretending to know what a niqab is"), a female protagonist who sexualizes herself and her surroundings every chance they get, and a plot that makes no sense. Seriously, I don't know what went on in Weir's head when they came up with this moon logic, or how they managed to get it past the editors:

"No, you can't exile me from the Moon because there are no drugs on the Moon. See, there used to be people smuggling stuff to the Moon but I'm so good at my smuggling side job that I drove them all out of business, so now I'm the only smuggler on the Moon and I don't smuggle narcotics. So if you exile me, other smugglers will fill the vacuum and they will definitely smuggle drugs to the Moon."
--Andy Weir

(As a side note, this works. She gets to stay on the Moon.)

Which is right up there with the Moon sheriff going, 
"Okay, so I just caught you trying to sabotage the oxygen systems we all need to live, but I'm really lonely so I won't turn you in if you'll just be my friend. Deal?"
--Andy Weir

WTAF.
La skogen leve by Nora Dåsnes

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adventurous hopeful informative inspiring reflective fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated

5.0

Such a wonderful and inspiring book. It was so good to see the gang from "Cross My Heart and Never Lie" again (and it's interesting that the book this time follows Bao), and this is still a beautiful depiction of tween-hood. The main characters go through their share of drama, clumsily romance boys, wonder what it will be like to hit puberty and start middle school, and are still young enough to 'fight' with sticks over their base in the woods.

Only, lately the rains have been worsening, making the stream in the woods harder and harder to cross, and the news are full of temperature and precipitation records being broken and dire predictions about the worsening climate crisis. Worst of all, Bao feels she is the only one who really cares. Her friends seem more apathetic and although Bao represents the school's students in a panel with the school administrators, they tend to neither listen to her nor care much about the climate. In fact, she is angry with the school for hypocritically teaching kids about climate change on the one hand, but at the same time not encouraging more action than 'drawing cute animal pictures' of endangered species like polar bears.

To her horror, the school administrators and representatives from the municipality decide to tear down half the protagonists' beloved forest to expand the school parking lot, because there are so many parents driving their kids to school, especially during rain, making the trip to school more dangerous for the pupils who still walk. When Bao tries to point out that the problem is too many parents giving their kids rides in the first place, the adults barely hear her, and the proposition for a new parking lot is approved with a shocked and furious Bao as the only dissenting voter.

Bao decides to act to save her beloved forest through any means she can think of. Her friends may be apathetic about action against climate change, but they get on board pretty quickly when they realize their forest is threatened, and the book teaches the basics of activism (including that adults may not be as useless as they first appear) and advocates using social media such as TikTok, writing to local media, starting petitions, and even mild civil disobedience like sit-ins. It also uses past generations' protests as a paralell when we learn that several of the kids' parents were also activists in their youth. Throughout the book we also learn about climate crisis when the kids compile a 'report', complete with helpful illustrations, to the adults, even though this actually feels a bit superfluous as the basics of climate change should be well-known to everyone at this point, and the book even gets the greenhouse effect wrong (it affects radiation from the earth, not rays from the Sun). I would rather it tackled common arguments from climate change deniers.

All in all, this is a really inspirational book about participation in local democracy. The pacing really works, we can feel Bao's anger when she talks to her friends and sends them messages, and I love that rather than tackling climate change as a whole, it makes the stakes something near and close, the forest we've already been introduced to in the first book. This makes the kids' fight a lot easier to relate to than if it had just been a fight against nebulous concepts like climate change and political inaction. There has been some pearl-clutching about how 'the book teaches children they should break the law!', but there is no vandalism or violence in the book.

All in all, 5 out of 5, hoping there's more books about Tuva, Bao, and the gang.
Ti kniver i hjertet by Nora Dåsnes

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hopeful lighthearted reflective fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

5.0

Today is the Last Day of the Rest of Your Life by Ulli Lust

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adventurous challenging dark emotional informative sad slow-paced

4.5

A tough, highly informative and provocative memoir of a 'runaway' teen's adventures in Italy. Her hardships, betrayals, and above all the incredibly mysogonistic culture that plagued (plagues?) Italy will make you angry. You will root for Ulli Lust and hope she makes it home safely at the end.

Overall a good read, and the art style is farily simple and impactful, but I found it to have some pacing issues throughout.

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Room 13 by Robert Swindells

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challenging dark mysterious tense medium-paced

4.5

The Outsider by Stephen King

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dark inspiring mysterious reflective slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.75