A review by hannahslit
Hurricane Summer by Asha Bromfield

challenging emotional hopeful reflective sad fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes

4.0

Hurricane Summer by Asha Bromfield is a brilliant, blistering debut. 
Seventeen year old Canadian teen Tilla and her nine year old sister Mia have been sent to stay with their father in the countryside of Jamaica for the summer. Tilla expects she may have to confront how she feels about the father that is largely absent from herself, her mother and her sister’s lives, but she isn’t  prepared for what awaits her in country: people that view her as a privileged foreigner and a multitude of secrets that her presence threatens to expose. 
First love, friendship and exploring the land (Bromfield gives readers gorgeous descriptions of  Manchester, Jamaica) are amongst the more  tender parts of this novel, however it is a story that reckons with a lot of trauma. 
Described as a coming of age story that examines the transition from girlhood to a young woman and the complicated relationship between a young woman and her absent father, Hurricane Summer also tackles colourism, sexism, misogyny, infidelity, domestic abuse, incest, abortion, sexual assault, immigration, abandonment, grief, poverty, class, privilege and more. 
Not all of the issues are adequately covered, however I admire the authors attempt to raise awareness to these serious issues to a young adult audience. 
The patois is accurate and Bromfield captures the easy humour of Jamaicans very well. Tilla’s story is quite an extreme depiction of reactions to people ‘from foreign’, though I do feel Bromfield shows what it feels like to be the butt of a joke everyone appears to be in on. 
Andres death was unfortunate as he was the only consistently kind character and didn’t get to experience a different kind of life away from the hostility he was exposed to. There could have been a different way to show readers Tilla’s growth without killing him.

An unexpected standout for me was a moment between Tilla and her father where she confronts him about him abandoning their family in Canada. It was a sad yet necessary conversation that was more melancholy for its lack of resolution. 
I wanted Tilla to stand up for herself earlier than she did, but I can appreciate that she’s a teenager in a new surrounding without much allies. Toward the end, the book becomes more dramatic and poetic in terms of language which is quite a departure from the tone of the rest of the book, which I don’t think totally works. 
Much like a hurricane, this story is powerful and sweeps readers along for an emotional ride. 
Hurricane Summer is a coming of age story that I will be thinking about for a long time. I am glad to have read it. 

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