Edition cover

  • ISBN10: 0439490359
  • ISBN13: 9780439490351
  • Paperback
  • 256 pages
  • Push

Tomorrow, Maybe
by Brian James

Reviewed by Jaemi

Rating: 4 out of 5

  • Posted 1 years ago
  • Viewed 168 times, 0 comments
  • Average user rating: (4/5)

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It can be a world of shadows, ghosts, haunted memories, and shame. But it can also be freedom, beauty, and solidarity bred of understanding. Every street kid has their story--they don't ask, but they know. For Gretchen, it was her Stepmother. Continued life under the same roof as her: impossible. At 15, she still feels like the baby, even though it's been two years. Two years learning to love the morning, before the city wakes up. Loving life while the sun is rising. Liking it less once there's a world to see. Two years on the streets take their toll. Lately, it's the dream of getting out that keeps Gretchen going.

Until Elizabeth.

Tiny, cold, and silent, she arrives one night on the stairs. It's not a place Gretchen usually stays. Still, she can't help but take a stand. They tell her a kid that young will only be trouble. But all she sees is someone who needs her. Someone to take care of. From that moment on, Elizabeth is hers.

At first it's simple. Easy enough to make Elizabeth smile. Easy to be happy just because she is. Then people start to drift, police start to raid, life gets more and more out of control. The streets aren't as fun anymore. The dream seems farther and farther away. Today isn't enough, tomorrow slips from her reach. Only the finality of total loss can bring resolution.

______________

Brian James is one of my favorite authors. He writes about the world as I know it, and does so well. And thanks to the MySpace craze, I've actually gotten to interact with him enough to know that he's a really cool guy. And should be coming to my Library this summer so I can meet him in person!

This is his second book, and marks the real start of his writing take-off. While I enjoyed his first book, it's a world apart from the rest that follow, in more ways than one. Starting with Tomorrow, Maybe his stories delicately intertwine. It's very cool. I'm currently awaiting his next release, which will pick up Elizabeth's tale a few years down the road.

*mi

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