Monday, August 15, 2022

When You Get the Chance

When You Get the Chance 
By Emma Lord
Wednesday Books, 2022. 308 pages. Young Adult Fiction 

Millie Price deals with her lovable but introverted dad, her drama club rival, Oliver, and her "Millie Moods," the feelings of intense emotion that threaten to overwhelm, but when an accidentally left-open browser brings Millie to her dad's embarrassingly moody LiveJournal, Millie knows she must find her mom. 

This is a lovely quest of self-discovery as Millie tries to figure out who she is at her core, and what part of that comes from the mom she doesn’t know. If you loved Mamma Mia, this book takes you on a pretty similar ride. Millie doesn’t know who her mom is, and it could be any of the three women her dad dated in college. She strives to get close to all three women, trying to figure out who it is, and she builds some wonderful relationships along the way. Full of witty banter with her rival, Oliver, this is quirky and fun novel musical theater fans will adore. 

If you liked When You Get the Chance, you might also like: 

Beauty and the Besharam
By Lillie Vale
Viking, 2022. 390 pages. Young Adult Fiction 

Kavya Joshi has always been told she’s a little too ambitious, a little too mouthy, and overall just a little too much. So, when her nemesis, Ian Jun, witnesses Kavya’s very public breakup with her loser boyfriend on the last day of junior year, she decides to lay low and spend the summer doing what she loves best–working part time playing princess roles for childrens’ birthday parties. But her plan is shot when she’s cast as Ariel instead of her beloved Belle, and learns that Ian will be her Prince Eric for the summer. 

Here We Are Now
By Jasmine Warga
Balzer + Bray, 2017. 292 pages. Young Adult Fiction 

While her mother is out of town, 16-year-old Taliah accompanies her estranged father--a famous rock star who one day appears on her doorstep--to Oak Falls, Indiana, to meet his dying father and the rest of his family, and on the way, Taliah learns about how her parents met and separated, her mother's experience as a Jordanian immigrant, and her own ability to accept change and open up to others. 

ACS

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