Thursday, November 3, 2016

The Light Fantastic by Sarah Combs








I finished this novel on the plane back from Atlanta.  The Light Fantastic was a wonderful novel about the pain that some kids are hiding below the surface, and the extremes they may go to to get rid of that pain.  Told through the neatly interwoven stories of several different characters, it also becomes a tale of redemption as our characters #findthehelpers that guide them through the pain, through the isolation, and into the light fantastic.  When it all comes down to it, I think our character Lincoln says it best:


From Amazon:

Seven tightly interwoven narratives. Three harrowing hours. One fateful day that changes everything.

Delaware, the morning of April 19. Senior Skip Day, and April Donovan’s eighteenth birthday. Four days after the Boston Marathon bombing, the country is still reeling, and April’s rare memory condition has her recounting all the tragedies that have cursed her birth month. And just what was that mysterious gathering under the bleachers about? Meanwhile, in Nebraska, Lincoln Evans struggles to pay attention in Honors English, distracted by the enigmatic presence of Laura Echols, capturer of his heart. His teacher tries to hold her class’s interest, but she can’t keep her mind off what Adrian George told her earlier. Over in Idaho, Phoebe is having second thoughts about the Plan mere hours before the start of a cross-country ploy led by an Internet savant known as the Mastermind. Is all her heartache worth the cost of the Assassins’ machinations? The Light Fantastic is a tense, shocking, and beautifully wrought exploration of the pain and pathos of a generation of teenagers on the brink—and the hope of moving from shame and isolation into the light of redemption.

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