Reviews

The Broke Hearts by Matt Mendez

sarinatb's review

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challenging dark emotional hopeful inspiring sad medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.0

pwbalto's review

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5.0

Whoa. Look for this at award season - consummately crafted without feeling crafted at all; much about fatherhood and responses to trauma; love and friendship and art. El Paso setting; Loteria cards as a way to discuss character types and themes but also as a way to point out that everyone is El Borracho sometimes, everyone is El Pescado a veces letting their mouth get them in trouble, El Valiente can be anyone big or little. YA/adult crossover.

msmadeinchina's review

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4.0

The following review will contain spoilers for BARELY MISSING EVERYTHING by Matt Mendez. Continue reading at your own discretion.

It’s been a year since JD and Danny lost their best friend to police gunfire and neither has really found a way to move on. JD is now moving bombs for the Air Force and Danny is on the verge of flunking his college classes. Neither had ever envisioned these lives for themselves, but they are each trying to live a life that honors Juan, one that he will never get to live himself. But with a family emergency and imminent deployment on the horizon, the two come back together to confront their shared grief and figure out how to live a life they love because of Juan and not for him.

At a point in their lives where they are just starting to come into their own, JD and Danny's progress is stunted by this grief that has overtaken them - and that they haven’t fully come to terms with. Each has their own knee-jerk reaction to Juan’s death, leading them down a path they didn’t see for themselves prior, and it affects their ability to process their grief. Anyone who has suffered the loss of someone close to them will be able to relate to the feeling of being adrift that we see on full display in JD and Danny.

Mendez expertly crafts a story that epitomizes the idea that the things we’re passionate about can help to heal us in the face of great tragedy. At select points, we see JD’s POV through the lens of a film script, highlighting his love of and passion for film making. As Danny digs deeper into a school project that will save him from failing, he rediscovers his love and passion for creating art as well as the power it has to transform tragedy into something beautiful. To round out the story, there are also flashbacks that seem unrelated at first, but their relevance is slowly revealed as we go on and it creates a magical full circle moment for one of the boys.

A powerful story about navigating grief, the healing power of our passions, and figuring out what comes after loss, THE BROKE HEARTS is the follow up to BARELY MISSING EVERYTHING by Matt Mendez that I didn’t know I needed.

Disclaimer: I received an advanced copy of this book from the publisher for free and have voluntarily written this review.

aryelee's review

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emotional hopeful reflective sad medium-paced

3.75

I enjoyed this book more than the first one, Barely Missing Everything. The characters have grown up some, we get more focus on one of the characters in the previous novel, and the focus on fathers and sons and how they grow up as reflections is very thought provoking. I enjoy how Matt Mendez writes about families and the complicated relationships between everyone. The shifting between narrative to script worked very well and seeing how the characters have changed since the first book was incredible.

He continues to stick to a simplistic writing style, so while it's easy to read and fairly easy to go through a book quickly, no specific passage or section stuck out to me. This is just personal preference; I like more lyrical, poetic writing styles, but his works very well for a contemporary novel like this one.
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