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A review by karis321
All Better Now by Neal Shusterman
1.0
~~Thank you to NetGalley and Simon & Schuster for the ARC!~~
I just - can't. This book is both overwhelming and underwhelming all at once.
I really feel like Shusterman's pandemic dystopia is far too soon, especially since, in large parts, COVID is very much still a problem, despite the pandemic being "over." Reading about improper masking, people purposely spreading a 5% mortality rate disease, worldwide shutdowns, it's practically a replica of what we experienced. Maybe I'd feel different if this was published in the 2030's or 2040's, but as is, it just isn't hitting.
Outside of that, Shusterman is trying way too hard to be philosophical here. It's not subtle, whatsoever. Rather, it feels like it's jammed directly down your throat. It very much gave off "I'm not like the other YA books" vibes with the story showing off how "deep" and "insightful" it is over telling a good story and characters. This whole tone kept throwing me off so much that I dreaded picking up the ARC; books should not make you feel like this!
The characters aren't really characters, just devices Shusterman uses to fit the message. The main characters aren't even interesting enough for the story to pay attention to, because we kept jumping into random side characters' who I care for even less. There was nothing for me to get invested to, whatsoever.
All in all, this was just not it for me. I recognize that Shusterman's talent as a writer, but this book was just too condescending in its tone for me to like in the slightest.
I just - can't. This book is both overwhelming and underwhelming all at once.
I really feel like Shusterman's pandemic dystopia is far too soon, especially since, in large parts, COVID is very much still a problem, despite the pandemic being "over." Reading about improper masking, people purposely spreading a 5% mortality rate disease, worldwide shutdowns, it's practically a replica of what we experienced. Maybe I'd feel different if this was published in the 2030's or 2040's, but as is, it just isn't hitting.
Outside of that, Shusterman is trying way too hard to be philosophical here. It's not subtle, whatsoever. Rather, it feels like it's jammed directly down your throat. It very much gave off "I'm not like the other YA books" vibes with the story showing off how "deep" and "insightful" it is over telling a good story and characters. This whole tone kept throwing me off so much that I dreaded picking up the ARC; books should not make you feel like this!
The characters aren't really characters, just devices Shusterman uses to fit the message. The main characters aren't even interesting enough for the story to pay attention to, because we kept jumping into random side characters' who I care for even less. There was nothing for me to get invested to, whatsoever.
All in all, this was just not it for me. I recognize that Shusterman's talent as a writer, but this book was just too condescending in its tone for me to like in the slightest.