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Two Winters

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

The winter of 1997 is a tragedy waiting to happen. Small-town life isn't easy for seventeen-year-old bisexual and closeted Paulina, especially when her best friend Mia becomes pregnant and doesn't want to tell the baby's father, Paulina's other best friend, Tesla. Meanwhile, Paulina's secret relationship with volleyball star Ani is about to go public. One fateful night, everything changes forever.

In the winter of 2014, Perdita, bi and proud in Chicago, is weeks away from turning seventeen. She loves her two moms, but why won't they talk about her adoption? When Perdita meets improv performer Fenton, she discovers both a kindred soul and a willing accomplice in her search for the truth. Will Perdita find what she's looking for?

Two Winters is a contemporary YA retelling of Shakespeare's The Winter's Tale about birth, death, Catholic school, improv comedy, and the healing nature of time.

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    • Kirkus

      August 15, 2021
      This retelling of The Winter's Tale follows parallel stories of family and forgiveness in two very different times. Paulina is many things: a semicloseted bisexual, a responsible daughter with NASA ambitions, the keeper of everyone's secrets. And in winter 1997, St. Cecelia's in rural, mostly White Havendale, Illinois, has some big ones. Paulina's best friend, Mia, is pregnant by her other best friend, Tesla, who's increasingly overwhelmed with the task of raising his little brother in lieu of his absentee parents. New kid Xander, the only Black student at the school, has not-well-hidden feelings for Mia. Devout, Mexican and Salvadoran American Mia is putting her trust in God alone, refusing to see a doctor or tell anyone except Paulina about the baby. Paulina herself is in love with Ani, a popular jock who won't take their secret relationship public. (Paulina, Tesla, and Ani are White.) In 2014 Chicago, amateur clockmaker Perdita loves life with her quirky adoptive moms, who are Chinese American and Black, but yearns to find out about her past. When she's pointed in the direction of Havendale, Perdita's story and that of Paulina and her friends begin to converge. Finding the original play's resonance in the complicated kingdoms of high school while still appealingly down-to-earth, the specificity of place and slow build toward complication and tragedy work well in Paulina's section but less successfully in Perdita's. Readers need not be familiar with Shakespeare's original to appreciate this skillful adaptation. Unabashedly queer, moving, and sincere. (Fiction. 14-18)

      COPYRIGHT(2021) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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