Sunday, 6 October 2013

Between the Lines Review


Title: Between the Lines

Author: Jodi Picoult and Samantha Van Leer

Release Date: 20th June 2013

Publisher: Hodder and Stoughton

Delilah knows it’s weird, but she can’t stop reading her favourite fairytale. Other girls her age are dating and cheerleading. But then, other girls are popular.

Delilah loves the comfort of a happy ending, and knowing there will be no surprises.

Until she gets the biggest surprise of all, when Prince Oliver looks out from the page and speaks to her.

Now Delilah must decide: will she do as Oliver asks, and help him to break out of the book? Or is this her chance to escape into happily ever after?

Oliver has always played the fairytale prince, just as the author wrote him. But what happens when Oliver doesn’t want to be stuck in the fairytale anymore?

When Oliver meets a reader, Delilah, the first person who has ever been able to hear him, his dream seems closer than ever. But even with Delilah’s help, how can he leave the story? Will he ever get a real happily ever after?

This book was absolutely fantastic! I am a bit of a fairytale fanatic (my dissertation focused on adaptations of Little Red Riding Hood) and this book was so fun and easy to read. It has the same sort of feel to it as Inkheart by Cornelia Funke with book characters that come alive although it is written in a much simpler style and has a teenage romance element. Inkheart has a much more detailed story whereas Between the Lines is more about the character’s emotions rather than a really complex plot. There are three stories; Between the Lines, a fairytale written by Jessamyn Jacobs, the first person narrative from Delilah (a girl in the ‘real world’) and a first person narrative written by Oliver (the fairytale prince from Jessamyn’s Between the Lines).  Although this might sound slightly confusing, the chapters are titled so that the reader is aware of which story we are in and each tale has its own font. Not only does this give each writer their own character but it makes the book look impressive and really interesting. Each narrative is brilliantly constructed to create the individual characters. Delilah’s tale offers us a teenager in turmoil, she is head over heels in love with someone she can’t even touch. Oliver’s story offers an unusual twist to the normal fairytale, showing the reader what happens when the story isn’t being read and how the characters feel about playing their roles as they were written by the author. Both stories are enchanting and delightful.

 In her acknowledgments at the end of the book, Jodi Picoult talks about the e-book generation and how she ‘wanted to create a story that was a keepsake – one you’d pass down to your children because of its beauty and design [...] we wanted a novel that took one’s breath away’. That is exactly what has been created. The brilliant content of the book is mirrored in the fonts, gorgeous illustrations and wonderfully detailed silhouettes that are used throughout the novel.  I have mentioned before about my love of illustrations in young adult books and Between the Lines really captured my imagination because of the beauty of the pages. It is a perfect example of how the physical page can add so much more to a novel than a digital one.

I thought that the characters of Delilah and Oliver were really well created and believable, I know what it is like to fall in love with your favourite book and Delilah’s story fantastically captured her emotional attachment to the written word.  An interesting point was raised when Delilah’s Mum disapproves of her reading the fairytale as she is a teenager but then encourages her to snuggle up and watch a Disney DVD. Why is it that people associate written fairytales with children?!?! Anyone can enjoy them and should enjoy them and I hope that as many people as possible, adults, children and teenagers alike, read and enjoy this story, just as I have.

5/5 A beautiful fairytale

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