Jandy Nelson
Walker 2015
Noah and Jude are
twins, linked in that ineffable way that twins so often seem to be. Inseparable for their childhood, things start
to change as they get older and I’ll Give You The Sun tells their story from
two points in time and alternating perspectives: Noah at thirteen and Jude at
sixteen. Hugely talented artists, we see
them as they compete and negotiate, taking nothing off the table – not the
moons, the ocean, the stars… not even their mother. As we read their wildly different realities
it quickly becomes clear that they are telling their story from opposing sides
of a terrible tragedy and that, for all their trading of the world and
everything in it, there is far more at stake than the sun.
Noah’s narrative
voice is strikingly resonant and entirely unique. An artist, his world is a painting made real,
a kaleidoscopic whirlwind from the palette of a mad painter, swirled through
with emotion and confusion, ambition and longing. Struggling with worn down truths and
surprising new edges, not least the boy next door who gives him whole new
universes, Noah longs for his sister even as she drifts from his reach. He is a character that is extraordinarily alive and his battle with himself is
shot through with moments of sheer joy that will lift reader’s hearts even as
his world darkens.
Seemingly the less
talented twin Jude, in the three years between Noah’s narration and hers, has
changed from the punchy, adventure seeking, rebellious sister that Noah watched
with such awe and dread. Instead, she
lives in a world that has been muted and drained of colour. Everything she touches seems to crumble and
she seems haunted by what might be an angry ghost or what might be her own
suffocating conscience. She’s a sculptor, encased in her own stone prison,
endlessly reaching for a brother she no longer recognises nor is sure she
deserves. Her grief and wearisome guilt is tangible on every page yet so is her
latent passion and she’s a fascinating character to get to know.
In fact, I’ll Give You The Sun is filled with
fascinating characters, all of whom are beautifully drawn by Nelson’s unique hand. Interweaving the story of Noah and Jude is a
father who comes into focus differently depending on whose eyes view him; an
erratic, all-consuming mother; a dead, yet surprisingly vocal grandmother; a
boy with a face like a cracked mirror and a bowler pitching meteorites. All are compelling although if there is one
weakness in the book it is the twins’ father, who is seen so differently by
each of his children that he never entirely comes into focus for the reader.
The writing, as
with Nelson’s The Sky is Everywhere,
is exceptional. Weird and truly
wonderful, her prose lifts from each page and is vivid, visceral and lush,
allowing the reader to transcend the basic plot and envelop themselves in a
world that is a splurge of winding words and heavy metaphor. It shouldn’t work,
particularly the level to which that heavy metaphor is used in each and every
sentence, but it does. Magical, yet
real, readers will find themselves entranced by this imagining of traded suns
and grandmother’s who float by propelled only by magenta parasols.
While Nelson, as
with her debut, riffs on sex, death, life, love, lust and identity – and does
so with thought-provoking aplomb – what I’ll
Give You The Sun is really about is the intangible relationship between
twins: the endless push and pull, ebb and flow of two distinct hearts wrestling
for ownership of a shared soul. It is
fascinating, different and brilliant.
For lovers of the gorgeous madness of Andrew Smith’s Grasshopper Jungle
and the billowing prose of E. Lockhart’s We Were Liars this is surely a must
read. For everyone else, if you love words
and those who use them beautifully, this is your book of the year. Highly
recommended.
This review was brought to you by Splendibird who spent her morning stroll along the beach searching for red sea glass and sand dollars, so thanks for that Jandy Nelson. You can read her equally glowing review of The Sky Is Everywhere here. I'll Give You The Sun is available now. Thank you to Walker Books for providing us with a copy of this title to review.
Comments
Krystianna @ Downright Dystopian