Review of The Song of Us

The Song of Us The Song of Us
by Kate Fussner
Middle School    Tegen/HarperCollins    368 pp.
5/23    9780063256941    $19.99
e-book ed.  9780063256958    $10.99

In this verse-novel retelling of the myth of Orpheus and Eurydice, seventh-grade girls Olivia and Eden fall in “like-like” at first sight. Soon, they’re meeting up to kiss almost daily and professing their love. But their (secret) happiness doesn’t last long. Eden falls in with a reckless crowd, and Olivia reacts with strong, hurtful words. The two are driven further and further apart, but Olivia sets out to reunite them on a quest involving poetry. The source material lends itself to the seriousness with which the protagonists take their situation—and beyond their romance and conflict, there are weighty elements at play, including Olivia’s mother’s depression and Eden’s fear of her homophobic father. It all leads up to an ending that isn’t perfectly happy, but one that gives hope to readers rooting for the two girls’ connection. Poet Olivia’s more deliberate voice (“I scramble to scribble / but my mind says wrong / to every word I write”) is distinct from more impulsive music-lover Eden’s (“This girl is / a power ballad: / bold, clever, all confidence / joy at full volume”); both are accessible and often impassioned. Hand to middle-school readers ready to be swept up in emotion.

From the July/August 2023 issue of The Horn Book Magazine.

Shoshana Flax

Shoshana Flax, associate editor of The Horn Book, Inc., is a former bookseller and holds an MFA in writing for children from Simmons University. She has served on the Walter Dean Myers Award, Boston Globe–Horn Book Award, and Sydney Taylor Book Award committees.

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