Reviews

About a Girl by Sarah McCarry

whatsmacksaid's review against another edition

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5.0

(UGH, the first time I wrote out this review it didn't save.)

Four and a half stars. This was so moving and beautiful. I read a few reviews that complained the protagonist and narrator, Tally, was too hard to empathize with because she's so analytical, but I never felt even a hint of that. I loved the whole story. (Also, the cover is gorgeous.)

Even readers who don't know a thing about astronomy (like myself) or Greek myths (not like myself) will be able to follow the story. It'll be difficult to see where the plot is going, but seriously, just trust the author because she'll get you through it in one piece.

Overall: this is an excellent read that hit all my happy buttons--friendship, growing up, stumbling around and trying to figure out Emotions while being utterly mortified by them, Greek myths, weird small towns where mystical things start to happen, and an utter lack of angst over the main character's bisexuality. I received my copy for free at Y'All West (May 2016), but having finished the book, I would say it is absolutely worth whatever you have to pay to get your hands on a copy.

drlisak's review against another edition

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5.0

I love books that take me in unexpected directions with rich language, poetic prose, and provocative reflections on literature that feeds the story. I was not aware this was the third book in a series. For me, it works as a stand alone, with just enough mystery, magic, and thought provoking questions to keep me reading. It is not an easy read, by any means, but it is one which sings with the voice of the stars, mathematics, and the music that many writers aspire to achieve.

storytimed's review against another edition

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4.0

I could write something very eloquent about this book, but mostly I just want to devolve into shouts of BI LOVE TRIANGLE!!. About a Girl is a beautiful, surreal dream of a book, so pretty in its depiction of a rural Washington town and long bike rides near the ocean and kissing a girl who is maybe supernatural that it took me until at least four hours after I'd finished it to realize that I wasn't really satisfied with the amount of mysteries left hanging (perhaps, though, that's because I haven't read the first two books in the series). Still, everything about Tally's life is highly #aesthetic, the writing is intricate and lovely, and I really like the commitment to having a diverse cast. Tally's smart and odd without being self-congratulatory about it, Maddy is wild and rather believable both as the supernatural and as the girl, and Shane is pretty cool as the back-home swoony best friend (I also really dug that he was a trans dude).

weetziebot's review against another edition

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4.0

"Really liked" is relative

ewil6681's review against another edition

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adventurous dark medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

3.25

liralen's review against another edition

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4.0

I am considered precocious, for good reason. Some people might say insufferable, but I do not truck with fools. (6)

McCarry's books seem to be hit-or-miss for readers on GR, but I remain solidly in the 'hit' category. For all that this is the least standalone of the three Metamorphoses books, I loved it. Combining mythology and astronomy and Shakespeare? Come on now. We get casual, matter-of-fact diversity (in terms of gender and sexuality and race); a heroine who is sure of herself and sure of her intelligence and confident in her 'unconventional' family; a dreamy, suspension-of-disbelief plot and general feel to the book. Tally is kind of irritating in the beginning, but in a she-is-supposed-to-be-that-way manner, and she's pushed to grow up quite a bit over the course of the book; she stops thinking and starts feeling.

My biggest complaint has nothing to do with the writing and everything to do with the cover, which I liked just fine until I read the book. What's up with the whitewashing? According to the text, Tally's hair 'falls down my back in a waterfall of coal' (10); her skin 'is quite smooth and a pleasing shade of brown, but not even a white person ever got cast as the lead of a romantic comedy because they had nice skin' (11). There are numerous other mentions of 'white people' and Tally not being white (e.g., 'Additionally, white people are not subject to the regular and exhausting lines of enquiry my skin and vaguely ethnic features occasion ("What are you? No, I mean where are you from? No, I mean where are you really from? No, I mean where are your parents from?")', p. 11). Meanwhile, Maddy is described, in part, as such: '...her knuckles were streaked with dirt; and her bare forearms were alive with black tattoos...and crisscrossed with pale scars that stood out sharply against her dark skin. A tangle of black-dyed hair rioted down her back in a serpentine mass.' (87)

The girl on the left of the cover looks like neither of these descriptions. The girl on the right could be maaaaaybe stretched out to one of them, except I really don't think either Tally or Maddy is the type for hoop earrings and nail polish. (Perhaps added to make it clear that both cover models are female?)

Makes me very cranky about publishing, but doesn't change my feelings about the writing, which I loved.

katereads2much's review against another edition

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3.0

First I want to say that the language/writing style of this book is intense and I found a lot of the descriptions beautiful e.g. “There were a thousand questions I could have asked her, but I didn’t know where to start, and so I left them all buzzing in my mouth like bees battering a windowpane.”

I was not prepared for the sheer weirdness of this story especially given how normal the first half of the book feels. I mean this girl's family life is non-traditional (which I loved) but the first half of this book seems like a fairly real story - a girl is struggling with first love and having been abandoned by her mother with no real idea who her father is.

Her journey to find her family at best strange and at worst disturbing and completely magical.

I never grew particularly fond of any of the characters in this book except perhaps Raoul and Henri, but I had to know what all the weirdness was about once it got started.

Thanks to Netgalley for providing an ARC in exchange for an honest review

superdilettante's review against another edition

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4.0

This author is new to me, and also not; I found one of her old zines in my things and thought to try to find out what she was doing in the here and now. And surprise, she’s a really evocative, poetic YA writer, with stories full of longing that limn the edges of the factual and metaphorical universes. I love it. I can’t wait to read more. My only regret is that, had I ever applied myself to actually reading mythology, I would have loved this story even more. But I’m lazy.

hehkhatea's review against another edition

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DNF

I can't count how many queer lit books feature self discovery as the main theme and plot. Thankfully this one was more about the protagonist, Tally, is trying to find her estranged father and learn about her also estranged mother.
The love interest(s) always came off as really angry???? Angsty transboy and angry lesbian. Why?
Got really confused about the races of characters. The author was trying to put representation and made valiant attempts but I still couldn't tell, probably doesn't help that the cover has two girls that look white.
REALLY WANT MORE CHAPTER BREAKS FOR THE LOVE OF GOD PLEASE
The lack of chapter breaks and the way the Tally told the story reminded me of my high school textbooks 10/10 would not recommend writing YA like a textbook.

Will probably try to read this book again, probably would help if I read the other three even though I was told it wasn't directly connected.

readinggrrl's review against another edition

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5.0

The third and final book in this trilogy. I didn't realize this was a trilogy when I requested it from the publisher through netgalley, so when I found out I wanted to hurry up and get to the first books in the series before reviewing this one. I listened to the other books on Audio and the narrator Renata Freedman's voice was hypnotic and I found myself hearing her voice as I read this one on my e-reader.

This book focuses on Tally, Aurora's daughter who she dropped on her best friends doorstep as an infant. Once again we never learn Aurora's best friends name instead Tally calls her Aunt Beast, and no one else ever refers to her by her name. As Tally gets older, as with many children whose parents have abandoned them she has questions about her parents that no one is willing to answer, she finds someone who she thinks may be her father and leaves on a quest from New York City to Seattle Washington. The story from there takes on more of the supernatural light that the first two alluded to.
This book was so beautifully written and this whole series is such a nod to Ovid and his famous poem Metamorphosis,the mythology of which, is scattered throughout this final book really tying it all together. Tally may have been a very mature teen but you see her transformation from naive young girl to a more mature young woman by the end of the book. Her experiences not only transform her but also transform some of the other characters as well. This book is poetic, tragic, mystical and beautiful. I couldn't put it down.