Break This House
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- $8.99
Publisher Description
From Printz honoree and National Book Award Finalist Candice Iloh, a prose novel about a teenager reckoning with her family’s—and her home town's—secrets.
Yaminah Okar left Obsidian and the wreckage of her family years ago. She and her father have made lives for themselves in Brooklyn. She thinks she’s moved on to bigger and better things. She thinks she's finally left behind that city she would rather forget. But when a Facebook message about her estranged mother pierces Yaminah’s new bubble, memories of everything that happened before her parents' divorce come roaring back. Now, Yaminah must finally reckon with the truth about her mother and the growing collapse of a place she once called home.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In Iloh's sophomore novel, 16-year-old Yaminah "Minah" Okar, who is Black, has decided to separate her new life living in Brooklyn with her father from the life and family she left behind in Michigan. Since Minah is "done with that side of the family," she's surprised to find out that her estranged mother, Sandra, has died of cancer, though anonymous vignettes throughout allude to substance use as the true cause. Hoping for closure, Minah returns to the hometown she's abandoned to learn more about what happened to her mom, whom she only remembers as some-one who "changed overnight." But her family's resentment over Minah's refusal to communicate with them, and their hesitancy to discuss her mother's death, forces her to come to terms with the past and face the loss of a mother whom she didn't understand and was unable to forgive. While dream sequences, flashbacks, and subplots sometimes make the narrative feel disjointed, its characters are self-assured and dynamic, and Minah's desire to know her mother makes Iloh's meditation on grief, individuals' capacity for change, and perseverance of family a thought-provoking read. Ages 14–up.
Customer Reviews
I Can Feel It
I really liked this book. It’s visceral and comes from a place of deeply felt emotions. Definitely worth a read.