FICTION

Althea & Oliver

384p. Viking. Oct. 2014. Tr $17.99. ISBN 9780670785391. LC 2013041135.
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RedReviewStarGr 9 Up—This richly satisfying debut defies simple description. On its surface, it is about teenage best friends, a boy and a girl, who have complicated and messy feelings. Friends since they were six, the teens have grown up doors apart, both in single-parent families in Wilmington, North Carolina. What sets this novel apart is the way the youth are allowed to speak for themselves in all their chaotic, exciting complexity. Althea, who has anger issues, is in love with Oliver, which would be complicated enough even if Oliver didn't seem to be a modern-day Rip Van Winkle, falling into a strange, deep sleep at random moments and not waking up for weeks or months. Oliver's mom, Nicky, finds a doctor in her home city of New York who is conducting a study of this disorder, called Kleine-Levin Syndrome, and Oliver grudgingly agrees to participate. While he navigates the strange world of a hospital ward filled with other teenage boys with KLS, Althea tells her dad that she's taking a road trip to visit her mom in New Mexico, but then heads to New York City to find Oliver. Instead, she falls in with a collective house of crusty punks in the Red Hook section of Brooklyn, who are perfectly described with deep familiarity instead of exotic detachment. Oliver's medical condition functions as both an interesting narrative quirk and a deeper metaphor, and the resolution is satisfyingly uncertain. The novel is set in the mid-1990s, which is vividly re-created with plenty of drinking, sex, and rock and roll, but it is the exquisitely created and painfully real, pitch-perfect characters who make it so memorable.—Kyle Lukoff, Corlears School, New York City
A beguiling, original, and refreshingly unidealized story about falling—or not falling—for a close friend. In precise and evocative language, Cristina Moracho captures the complications and confusions of teenage (and all) relationships. In Althea and Oliver’s case, the angst is amplified by their longtime friendship, exemplified in an early scene in which Althea has a momentous revelation: “She’d only had a couple of beers but was acting drunker than she was, for camouflage, because as she watched pink rivulets of rainwater stream down Oliver’s temples and wrists, she’d realized something horrifying: She wanted him to kiss her.” What starts out as a tale of an increasingly complicated friendship, told from each side, becomes a dual coming-of-age story when Althea and Oliver have a major falling out and go their separate ways. Readers will be gratified to follow both characters as they grapple with their respective issues (e.g. Althea’s lack of self-confidence, Oliver’s troubling sleep disorder) and undergo believable personal transformations—before eventually coming back together. The novel’s time period and main settings—Wilmington, North Carolina, and New York City—are immersive and critical elements of the story. The deftly rendered 1990s should be fascinating for readers seeking a look back that goes deeper than pop-culture nostalgia.
Prickly teenager Althea's more passive best friend Oliver develops a sleeping disorder. While she desires a romantic relationship with him, Oliver just wants everything to return to normal. This culturally rich novel set in mid-1990s North Carolina and New York City explores the duo's complex coming-of-age--full of bad decisions and secrets--and the undoing of their friendship. An ambitious, noteworthy, well-written debut.

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