I should also say that I wrote this review for a website...
Ketchup Clouds is written as a
series of letters from a young girl known only as ‘Zoe’. She is writing letters
from England to a criminal who has been sentenced to the death penalty in
America. The confessional nature of her letters reveals more details about the
crime of the American man as well as her own crimes. This is a unique concept
and makes it feel as if Zoe is talking directly to the
reader.
There are several tantalising
mysteries running through the story, many not being solved until the very end.
This includes Zoe’s real identity, which she can only reveal after confessing
her crime. Zoe can only forgive herself by revealing her thoughts in letters and
sending them to a complete stranger who cannot reply. It becomes a type of
therapy for her and each letter confesses a few more
secrets.
Zoe is not the only one with
secrets, there are also secrets contained in her family, such as: why her sister
is deaf, why her Grandad is no longer part of the family, why her parents keep
arguing. Will Zoe manage to get to the root of these problems, while solving her
own worries?
As well as the romantic elements of
the story, other subjects covered are: coping with guilt, deafness, sisterly
rivalry, forgiveness, grief and compassion. This book would be for the more
confident reader and would be for both girls and boys. Girls may prefer the more
romantic aspects of the story and the tearjerker ending.
Aww I'm so glad you liked it! I have been waiting to read this, it sounds less depressing than My Sister Lives on the Mantelpiece. Does the library have it yet?
ReplyDeleteNo sorry Debbie, I need to make sure we order some in! I really think it'll make the Carnegie longlist/shortlist next year. You MUST read it!x
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