OLDER FICTION
Rogers, Shannon C. F.

I'd Rather Burn than Bloom

(2) YA When Marisol Martin's mother, with whom she had a difficult relationship, dies in a car crash, Marisol and her family are plunged into grief they don't know how to begin to process. A chain of behaviors soon after lands the Albuquerque high school sophomore in juvie ("where they send you to take classes on a computer when you've been kicked out of your own school, either for a little while, or forever"). She begins to heal by opening up to new friends, including bonding over commonalities between her Filipina mother's culture and fellow students' Mexican American culture. This poignant coming-of-age story, told in alternating "then" and "now" segments, takes readers on a complicated and isolating journey of loss, with welcome moments of humor. It spotlights the intricacies of parent-child relationships, acknowledging that adults don't always have the answers. Marisol is likable albeit flawed, and her story is emotional and heart-wrenching.

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