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Pushing the Limits

Katie McGarry

3.95 AVERAGE


Yorumun orijinali Kitap Hayvanı'nın Günlüğü'nde.

Pushing the Limits hiç beklemediğim kadar duygulandırdı beni. Bazen bazı kitaplar oluyor, büyük bir umutla başlıyorum, duygusallık hat safhadadır diyorum, bir bakıyorum fos çıkıyor. Gerçi ağlamak için kitap okumadım hiçbir zaman. Zaten ağlamam da kolay kolay; şimdiye kadar gözlerimin dolduğu kitap sayısı çok azdır. Ancak Pushing the Limits en beklenmedik biçimde kalbimi sıkıştırdı. Özellikle bir young adult kitabından hiç mi hiç beklemiyordum bunu.

Beni neden etkilediğinin detaylarına az sonra döneceğim. Şimdi biraz konusundan bahsedeyim.

Echo Emerson, bir zamanların popüler kızı şimdi herkesten kaçıyor. Eskiden okulun en havalı çocuğuyla çıkıp, tüm aktivitelerde yer alırken artık en yakın arkadaşından bile uzak duruyor. Bunların hepsi, yani eski hayatı ise tek bir gecede yok oldu. Echo'nun kollarında, ısrarla sakladığı yaraların oluştuğu gece.

Bir de Noah'ımız var. Noah Hutchins Echo'nun aksine her şeyi boş vermiş, kötü çocuk imajıyla ün salmış bir genç adam. Kimseyi umursamıyor, herkesle dalga geçiyor, hattâ ot bile içiyor. Tabii onun böyle olmasının da bir sebebi var. Noah'ın annesi ve babası birkaç yıl önce evde çıkan bir yangında ölmüş. Noah ve iki küçük erkek kardeşi öksüz kalınca kardeşleri Jacob ve Tyler geçici olarak evlatlık verilirken, Noah da kısa zaman içinde birkaç tane değiştirmek üzere başka bir ailenin yanına verilmiş.

Echo'nun sorunu sadece kollarındaki yaralar ya da tepetaklak olan hayatı değil. Bir de peşini bırakmayan kâbuslar var. Echo'nun bu hale gelmesinin sebebi bipolar bozukluğu olan annesi. Ağabeyi Aires'in Afganistan'da hayatını kaybetmesinin ardından Echo'nun tam olarak hatırlamadığı bir gecede annesi manik atak geçiriyor. İşte Echo, bir zamanlar taptığı, her şeyini örnek aldığı annesini de eski yaşamıyla birlikte kaybetmiş oluyor.

İkisinin yolları okul sayesinde kesişiyor. Zaten birlikte birkaç dersler olan ikili, Echo'nun Noah'a notlarını yükseltmesinde yardım etmesi için bir araya geliyor. Aslında ikisi de okuldaki psikolojik danışman Mrs. Collins'den destek alıyor. Ne kadar zoraki olsa da. Noah kardeşlerini üvey ailenin elinden alabilmek için notlarını yükseltmek zorunda. Bu yüzden de Echo'ya muhtaç.

İlk başta Echo daha önce kendisiyle alay ettiği için hazır cevaplılığıyla bir güzel Noah'ın hakkında geliyor. Ama sonra ne oluyorsa oluyor ve ortak bir nokta buluyorlar: Mrs. Collins'ten kendi dosyalarını alıp Echo'nun geçmişi hatırlamasında, Noah'ın ise kardeşlerinin üvey ailesi hakkında bilgi almasına yardımcı olmak. Birlikte geçirdikleri zamanlar onları giderek yaklaştırırken, birbirlerini daha iyi tanıma imkânı buluyorlar.

Noah hakikaten harika bir karakter. Echo'yu sık boğaz etmemesi ama sahiplenici tavrı, kardeşlerine duyduğu koşulsuz sevgi çok etkileyici. Ve Pushing the Limits'de beni etkileyen kısım son derece gerçekçi olmasıydı. Echo'nun geçmişi hatırlarken girdiği krizler ve her ikisinin de tavırları kesinlikle yapay değildi. Öyle ki, kitabın aslında klasik bir konusu olmasına rağmen duyguları hissetmem kocaman bir artı kazandırdı. Özellikle kitabın sonlarına doğru tuhaf bir şekilde hafiften gözüm dolar gibi oldu, yalan söylemeyeceğim.

Kısacası bir young adult romance kitabından beklenmeyecek bir biçimde etkisinde bıraktı beni Pushing the Limits. Karakterleri, gidişatı çok sevdim.

Bu arada kitap aynı adlı seriye ait ilk kitap. İkinci kitabı Dare to You, kitabın yan karakterlerinden Beth'in hikâyesini işleyecekmiş ve 7 Haziran'da yayımlanması bekleniyor.

*Copy of the book is provided by the publisher, Harlequin UK, via NetGalley.

Echo is struggling to get through her senior year of high school. As if that trial weren't hard enough on it's own, Echo has the misfortune of having once been “popular.” Now she's a post-traumatic stress laden ghost of her former artsy self, with a distressing hole in her memory and a gaggle of “friends” who seem desperate to fix her social standing. Her emotionally absent father and air-headed babysitter-turned-stepmom aren't helping things. Fortunately, her new therapist has the idea to make sure Echo tutors one of the school's resident tortured badboy player: Noah.

Noah has his own issues, of course. He's been bounced from one foster home to another since his parents' death orphaned him and separated him from his two much younger brothers—both of whom he's intent on gaining custody of as soon as he turns 18. But Noah's negative coping mechanisms are many.

Thankfully, this is more of a slow-burn romance with not an ounce of insta-love in sight. Katie McGarry shows a lot of promise in this debut (and having read a later novella by her, this reader is confident her storytelling prowess continues to grow.)

What I liked:

*One of the most authentic-feeling parts of this story was the dismal portrayal of parts of the foster care system. Noah got a bad draw—as too many foster kids do. But I know as a teenager, I didn't take much into consideration concerning foster kids at my school. I see potential in this book for extending some empathy, or at least patient attempt at understanding, for kids in displaced family situations.

*It does seem as though the author was trying to send responsible messages to impressionable young readers, including: don't have sex before you're “ready,” get on birth control if you -think- you might have sex, and keep a condom handy. And if you're going to sleep with every random girl who offers herself, you should get yourself tested for STDs now and then. (Though I have concerns about how realistic it is to think a guy as admittedly promiscuous as Noah would be willing to just stop pressuring and wait indefinitely when he figures out Echo is a virgin...I could at least appreciate the general idea that decent guys take 'no' for an answer and don't just move on to the next willing warm body.)

What I didn't care for:

*Most of the side-characters had a certain forgettable flatness about them. Mrs. Collins, the therapist/clinical social worker, was about the only one that seemed to come to life. (Nice to see at least one positive adult figure depicted, btw.)

*I just didn't like Noah. At all. Despite the dead-parents background and crappy foster care situation...the underlying angst still felt forcibly overdone. (His flagrant overuse of F-bombs and the word 'siren' got to the point of drinking-game comical for me.) It was as though his situation conjured pity, but no real connection. He was short-sighted, judgmental, about as deep as a kiddie pool...and it took much too long for me to start to feel otherwise about him. Granted, the badboy+goodgirl trope has never really done it for me.

*Echo's repressed memories issue didn't sit quite right with this reader—but maybe I was hoping for more focus on the far more common functional issue of PTSD. The buildup to the big reveal felt a bit drawn out, and the revelation was actually more mild than I'd been expecting all along.

4.5!
Yirim ben bu kitabı <3

I know that many people loved it to pieces and even though I liked it all right it took me longer that I thought it would to actually finish it.
Noah and Echo are really damaged kids who are trying to move on and in order to do so they need to comfront their demons.
The book tells us a story that could be easily confused with a typical sex charged-teenage anger-kind of book and it is so not it, they are both in difficult places and once you get to know them you can't help but fall in love with them both.
It was pretty emotional at times and I had to blink like a maniac in the underground because I was about to loose it and start crying. It was not all dramatic though, romance and loyalty played an important part, friendship and family...it was a really good rounded story.

I finished this book with a wow. The writing was just lyrical and really kept me intrigued throughout the whole of the book. the characters are so captivating and the conflict is so well written within the story. I love the whole book.



Pushing the Limit was an alright read. I did enjoy it, but I can't help but wish it was a little more than it was. I don't know what was missing exactly, but something kept it from being amazing for me. I liked both Echo and Noah, I liked their story, I liked how it worked out, but it was missing the extra oomph.

Echo used to be the popular girl. She had a popular boyfriend and lots of friends. She broke up with her boyfriend, then shortly thereafter something horrible happened to her. She doesn't really know what as she can't remember. She hates that she can't remember. She hates that her dad has remarried her babysitter. She hates that her step-mom is now pregnant. She hates that she cannot speak to her mom anymore, there is a restraining order against her. She blames her dad for not trying hard enough with her mom, for just moving on to her babysitter. She also has scars on her arms from whatever happened to her.

Noah has been in foster care since his parents died. He has not had the best time of it. He used to be a great student, he had good grades and a plan for life. That all changed when he became a foster kid and had to deal with growing up too quickly. He has slowly let his school work go and is not really in a great place. He hang out with his friends, Isaiah, who is also a foster kid that he lives with, and Beth, who's aunt is fostering them. They all have their issues, but Beth is horrible to everyone except Isaiah and Noah. She doesn't have a good home life, her mom has abusive boyfriends, so she spends a lot of time at her aunts.

When the new counselor comes to their school things start to change. She wants to help both Noah and Echo. Echo needs money to fix up her brothers car (he died overseas). It is the last thing she has of his and she wants to get it running again. Even though her dad has the money to pay for it, he won't. Really the dad is a bit of a nightmare, always wanting everything to look perfect, not really wanting Echo to remember what happened to her. When the counselor gives her the job of tutoring a student she quickly agrees. Little does she know it is Noah.

Noah has two younger brothers who he can't see very often. He got in trouble at a former foster home when he hit the abusive dad. Of course the dad didn't get in trouble as everyone blamed the foster kid. That is when he started to not care about things. The counselor promises him more visits with his brothers if he gets tutoring, so he quickly agrees.

Through the tutoring Echo and Noah start to grow closer. They both want to see their files, Echo to learn what happened to her and Noah to find his brother's address, so they work together to try and accomplish that goal. Along the way they fall for each other and it is really sweet. Beth is horrible to Echo, but Echo is just nice to her in return. I loved that. I loved that she wasn't nasty back. Overall it was a sweet story. I liked both Noah and Echo and how everything turns out. It was a good read, but I am not sure why it wasn't amazing for me.

This review was originally posted to Jen in Bookland

In un paesino immerso tra campi di granturco e campi da baseball, dove le persone si conoscono tutte e i segreti non esistono, è facile dimenticare di essere se stessi.

Quando la società, i genitori e gli amici ti dicono cosa fare, cosa dire, cosa pensare, cosa sentire, quando si viene plasmati a immagine e somiglianza dei desideri degli altri si vive in una bolla dove tutto è chiaro e prevedibile, semplice, giusto. Non c'è sforzo, non c'è paura, non c'è emozione.

Così, appena la superficie della vita perfetta di incrina, tutto crolla come un castello di carte.

L'identità costruita ad arte diventa una maschera troppo stretta, le passioni coltivate diventano un peso, le amicizie che ti davano conforto si trasformano in mostri di egoismo, i riferimenti di una vita diventano colonne pericolanti pronte a schiacciarti con il loro peso.

Ryan, puro e bello, il ragazzo sano, sportivo, gentile, quello popolare ma simpatico, quello alla mano ma quasi inarrivabile, esemplare di perfezione fisica e morale è il classico bravo ragazzo.

Promessa del baseball, fidanzato modello, figlio modello, amico modello, tutto in lui rispecchia i desideri di qualcun altro. Il padre, che in lui riversa i desideri della sua giovinezza; la madre, che lo vuole accoppiato con chi vuole lei; gli amici, che da lui si aspettano sempre il meglio; e Ryan stesso, che asseconda tutti con il sorriso sulle labbra, convinto di vivere la vita perfetta e felice di essere la persona che è.

Tutta questa perfezione viene deturpata dalla macchia dell'omosessualità. Un fratello gay cacciato di casa che non viene nemmeno nominato, come se non fosse mai esistito o peggio, morto e dimenticato. Ma per Ryan l'assenza del fratello è un buco nero che lo inghiotte e oscura la luce della sua vita. E' il primo, grosso, punto di rottura, quello che lo destabilizza e lo prepara ad un terremoto ancora più forte che metterà in discussione ogni cosa.

Dall'altra parte della città, come sul retro ammaccato di una medaglia splendente, c'è il quartiere degradato, covo di droga, delinquenza e infelicità. E' la zona di Noah, di Isaiah, di Beth.

Beth, che nel primo romanzo ci era sembrata aggressiva e scontrosa, si lascia vedere per com'è davvero, un fuscellino sferzato dalle tempeste. Con una madre alcolizzata e drogata, succube di un uomo violento che picchia sia lei che Beth, senza famiglia, con pochi amici che sanno poco della verità, la vita di Beth è fatta di solo due cose: il galleggiare fumoso dello stato post canna e il terrore puro, viscerale, di vivere la sua vita.

A differenza dello splendente Ryan, Beth è oscura, è portatrice di sofferenza e caos. Come una malattia, la vita di Beth ha alti e bassi, momenti semplici e fugaci di gioia alternati a vere e proprie fasi di dolore e sfortuna. E' la norma, per Beth, rattoppare gli stracci della sua esistenza e prendersi cura di se stessa e della madre, anche se è l'opposto di come dovrebbe essere. Appena Beth compie quella scelta, di difendere sua madre nonostante tutto, è chiaro che la sua vita prenderà una piega inaspettata.

Così Beth e Ryan dal parcheggio del Taco Bell si ritrovano un'altra volta in un'altra occasione senza un confine che li separi.

Il punto forte di questo romanzo? La semplicità di Ryan. E' lui, con il suo modo schietto e un po' timido di affrontare un osso duro come Beth, a ridimensionare il dramma di una vita al limite; ed è sempre lui che rappresenta alla perfezione la lotta d'identità di tantissimi teen ager di tutto il mondo, ma è il suo modo di innamorarsi, la sua lenta e consapevole presa di coscienza di Beth come ragazza e come essere umano a toccare più di ogni altro aspetto del romanzo. Perché l'amore e i sentimenti di Ryan sono puliti, trasparenti, semplici, sono talmente veri che nemmeno Beth riesce a smontarne il peso, nemmeno le circostanze possono affievolire ciò che prova.

Da una scommessa nasce una relazione che tocca ogni stadio dall'avversione, alla complicità, all'amicizia e all'amore. C'è un mondo intero in questa scommessa, un mondo dove Beth ha una seconda possibilità e ritrovare la serenità non è un sogno irrealizzabile, dove Ryan può liberarsi dalle catene di una vita preimpostata ed imparare a combattere.

Istintivamente non posso equiparare Scommessa d'amore a Oltre i limiti. Il primo, che non si scorda mai, aveva dalla sua parte due personaggi intensi, difficili, e una storia d'amore molto più forte ed incisiva. Il secondo romanzo, però, seppure manchi di quel qualcosa che manda su di giri, entra in sintonia con il lettore in modo più sottile e spontaneo ed emoziona in un modo completamente diverso. In un certo senso ho apprezzato di più la storia di Ryan e Beth rispetto a quella di Echo e Noah principalmente perché ho trovato un'affinità con l'umanità di Ryan: è troppo dolce e genuino per non vincere a mani basse.

La McGarry si conferma autrice di uno young adult maturo, che non abusa dell'aspetto romantico e della sessualità, focalizzandosi prima sui protagonisti - tratteggiandoli senza fretta e approfonditamente - e poi sul tutto il resto, aggiungendo con moderazione tutti gli elementi distintivi del genere.

Che poi, chi l'ha detto che per emozionarsi si devono patire sofferenze? A volte basta la semplicità per venire colpiti al cuore.

I‘m usually not huge on YA novels, but I absolutely loved this one ❤️

Normally I do not read romance novels because they create a false visualization of love. I picked this book because it was free and I needed a change from my normal genre. This harlequin romance has changed my perspective. Maybe its because it was teens around my age so I could relate. Maybe it was also be both main characters went through some terror. They were actually normal and not perfect like other book characters. This was a great read and never once did i get bored with it.

Echo Emerson doesn’t remember the night her life turned upside down, the night she went from being Miss Popular to being the school’s freak, the night her mom attacked her. She wants to know what happened, wants things to go back to normal, but her controlling father won't tell her, and her new therapist agrees. Echo wants normal…. Noah Hutchins was Mr. Popular until his parents died, and he and his brothers entered the system. Jumping foster homes, getting into fights, and basically giving up on life, all that Noah wants is his brother’s back. But to do that he’ll have to strive to do better. When these two are pushed together, they resist it, but a common goal makes them work together, secrets shared bring understanding and care, and a sizzling attraction begins to build. How much are they willing to risk to find trust and love again?

Katie McGarry has certainly pushed the limits with her debut novel. Powerful and honest, Pushing the Limits will wring out every emotion out of you, and you’ll love every second of it!

To say that I loved this story is the biggest understatement of the year. Every page I turned took me deeper and deeper into the story and into the characters lives, until I was so absorbed I forgot that these weren’t real people and I didn’t need to cry so hard. But, oh, cry I did. With a commanding prose, that doesn’t pull any punches, McGarry digs deep into themes of drugs, alcohol, sex, family issues, love, and loss. And it’s not only the way she deals with these themes that it’s masterful; it’s the way the characters deal with it.

Echo has lost her brother, her mom, and her father and his new wife don’t seem to care much about her. She feels lost and out of place, but still doesn’t fight or stand up to anyone…until Noah. Now, his life is even more messed up than Echo’s, but he is determined to fight and get his life back. Noah’s love for his little brothers tore at my heart every single time. I always ended up teary eyed but smiling in those scenes. What makes Echo and Noah great is that they’re flawed. Seriously. These two are so flawed is not even funny, but they’re all the more beautiful and real because of it. They start out with a common goal, and end up finding themselves closer than they believed they could get to another person. Their chemistry is explosive and sweet and frustrating all rolled up into one. If there’s one thing made very clear, is that nothing in life is easy, especially not love. Echo and Noah need to figure out who they are and want to be first, before they can see who they can be together.

Another big lesson is that sometimes we do need help, and we do need to trust in other people to help us see clearly. Mrs. Collins was pretty awesome with her eccentric therapist ways and her mad driving skillz. Though maybe not as obvious, but Echo and Noah’s friends also help. Lila’s optimism and cheery attitude, Isaiah’s straightforward advice, and Beth…well she was kind of a nuisance but I still wanted to know more about her and what made her that way. Lucky me, book two Dare You To is about Beth!

The last third of Pushing The Limits would’ve had me on the edge of my seat, but it was 3-freaking-AM and all I could do was wiggle in bed and chant ‘omgomgomgomgomg.’ Just remembering those closing scenes, with Noah and his brothers, and Echo and her family, makes me tear up. This book isn’t just a YA Contemporary Romance. It is substance and emotion and so much more! This is one of those books that I’ll recommend to anyone and everyone who engages me in book talk.

*Arc copy provided by the publisher via Netgalley*