Tonight The Streets Are Ours - Leila Sales

Rating: ★★★★

I love Leila Sales. I'm a biased super fan of her books and I was so excited when I bought Tonight The Streets are Ours. Not only is it a Leila Sales book, it is also one of the most beautiful books I've ever seen. Win win.

Plot

Recklessly loyal.

That’s how seventeen-year-old Arden Huntley has always thought of herself. Caring for her loved ones is what gives Arden purpose in her life and makes her feel like she matters. But lately she’s grown resentful of everyone—including her needy best friend and her absent mom—taking her loyalty for granted.

Then Arden stumbles upon a website called Tonight the Streets Are Ours, the musings of a young New York City writer named Peter, who gives voice to feelings that Arden has never known how to express. He seems to get her in a way that no one else does, and he hasn’t even met her.

Review

When I started reading this book, I had no idea what it was about and I think that's probably the best way to approach this story. It is so filled with twists and turns that limited knowledge really helps you get carried away by it, so I deleted half of the Goodreads summary for this post. I feel like this is all you need to know going into the story, however there's plenty to say about the story without giving away the plot (and if you do disagree with me, the full official summary is here so knock yourself out!).

What I adored about this book is the friendship between Arden and Lindsey. Their friendship is complicated; Lindsey always gets into trouble and Arden feels like it's her responsibility to fix things "because that's what you do when you love someone." Not surprisingly, this creates a lot of tension between two 17 year old girls, but I loved the idea of this. In so many YA novels, female friendships are filled with tension because the girls are too selfish, get distracted by boys/school or just grow apart when growing up. While this is realistic for teens, I liked seeing a friendship where one girl is just undeniably loyal to her friend; not to a boyfriend, but to her female friend. It's refreshing and so healthy to see represented in YA books.

A big theme in this book is social media, and a lot of Goodreads reviewers seem to take offence to the negative way social media is portrayed. I disagree with this completely. Tonight The Street Are Ours shows that we make everything we see and read on social media personal to ourselves. Arden reads Peter's blog and completely projects her own experiences, fears and ambitions on it and isn't that what we all do? We read about other people's lives and relate it back to ourselves and what it says about our life by contrast. Leila Sales shows the dangers in doing this, but also how healing this can be during certain periods in our life - we need escapism and social media is just another form of it.

This is no surprise, but I adored this book. The writing was amazing, the characters were so relatable (though I'm not at all like Arden and would never give so much to a friend without getting anything back), the plot was full of tension and executed so well. I don't know what else to say, besides that this is one of my favourite reads of 2015 and that five stars doesn't do it justice.

 

If you liked Solitaire...

 

 

This was inspired by the fact that I loved Solitaire and wanted to read a book like it. And what did I discover? It's not on www.whatshouldIreadnext.com - so here's my own little mini list.

Solitaire is all about finding your place as a teenager. It deals with high school, romance and a fair bit of mystery, all set in the UK. Need more books like that? I have 5 other great reads for you (links are to my reviews or the Goodreads page of the book):

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

This Song Will Save Your Life - Leila Sales

problems fitting in

Elise is basically Tori. They struggle with a lot of the same things - only Elise finds a different way out. It's Solitaire, without the mystery, but a big bonus of music.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Rehearsal - Eleanor Catton                  

experience drama in high school

This is a bit of an outsider in the selection. It's not a YA book, but it deals with girls at high school. A scandal breaks lose and influences more lives than expected. How do the girls deal with this? Just like Tori, these girls have to change their outlook on life.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

    Pretty Little Liars - Sara Shepard         

 for all the mystery you need

Do these books still need an introduction? Four high school girls suddenly get mysterious texts from A - and all their secrets are about to be revealed. If you loved the Solitaire element in Solitaire, you'll like these books too. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

This Is What Happy Looks Like - Jennifer E. Smith

Quirky romance

Solitaire is so wonderful, because of the relationship between Tori and Michael. In This Is What Happy Looks Like the love situation is completely different, but the relationship is still as quirky and fun.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

WILDCARD: Never Let Me Go by Kazou Ishiguro

for your trip to England

Just like The Rehearsal, this book reads completely different. But did you enjoy the Britishness of Solitaire? Then pick this book up - it also includes a boarding school backstory and a whole lot of mystery. What kind of people are they creating at Hailsham?

 

Any books you would add to this list?

This Song Will Save Your Life - Leila Sales

thissongwillsaveyourlife

Generally, I write reviews in about 15 minutes. The words flow out of my head straight onto my computer screen.
Today, I’ve been staring at my computer for about 30 minutes and I have nothing. (Well now I have these two sentences.)

How do I write a review that does justice to a book that I loved so much? How do I convince EVERYONE to read this book, without resorting to violent means? I don’t know - but the best I can do is to start writing and hope that everyone who reads this (and likes YA books) will pick this one up. 

This Song Will Save Your Life by Leila Sales starts off as any other dramatic YA book does. 

It’s Elise’s story and Elise is a teenager who struggles with being “normal”. She is an overachiever, she is too intelligent for her classmates and she doesn’t dress in the latest fashion. Because she can’t be normal, she doesn’t have any friends and she becomes desperate. At the start of the book, she cuts herself and then calls a popular girl and tells her - the famous “attention attempt at suicide”. This girl panics and calls 911 - obviously Elise’s parents, who are divorced, go into panic mode.
They make sure that Elise is never alone again so that she has no opportunity to cut herself. But Elise needs alone time and finds it by sneaking out at night and walking around while listening to music.
Pretty bland, right? Until Elise finds Start - an underground club in a warehouse, filled with cool kids and banging music. Here Elise finds something she never knew she was looking for.
To find out what that is, you really need to read the book!

So the summary might not sound all too different from many other YA books, and I guess the plot line of the story isn’t, but the characterisation definitely is.

Elise is more than just a typical unpopular teenager - instead of being ruled by a million insecurities, she’s actually pretty confident in her own abilities and skills. She knows what she can and cannot do - she just doesn’t understand why no one likes her. This made me like Elise so much more than the many whiny female leads in YA books - she’s a girl with balls and not afraid to show them. Not a Bella waiting on Edward. 
Furthermore, all of Elise's Start friends, Charm, Pippa, Mel and especially Vicky, have real personalities. They are not just some characters on the sideline of Elise’s story: they read as real people with real issues and real problems. I can imagine a book about each of them, because I know enough about them, even though they are just “side-characters”.

Added to that, the story flows really well and the pace is good. It’s quick - something happens every chapter and you will not get bored reading this story.

To top it all of, there is a list with the most awesome songs at the end of the story. The perfect soundtrack if you want to enjoy the book a bit more after reading it. (I just checked 8tracks and no one made that playlist yet?! Someone who understands 8tracks, please get on that!)