Book Review | The Geography of You and Me | Jennifer E. Smith

Book cover The Geography of You and Me by Jennifer E. SmithTitle: The Geography of You and Me
Author: Jennifer E. Smith (web | twitter)
Genre: Contemporary YA
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Publisher: Poppy
Release date: April 15, 2014
Source: Bought It

Other Books by Jennifer E. Smith: THE STATISTICAL PROBABILITY OF LOVE AT FIRST SIGHT | THIS IS WHAT HAPPY LOOKS LIKE

Lucy and Owen meet somewhere between the tenth and eleventh floors of a New York City apartment building, on an elevator rendered useless by a citywide blackout. After they’re rescued, they spend a single night together, wandering the darkened streets and marveling at the rare appearance of stars above Manhattan. But once the power is restored, so is reality. Lucy soon moves to Edinburgh with her parents, while Owen heads out west with his father.

Lucy and Owen’s relationship plays out across the globe as they stay in touch through postcards, occasional e-mails, and — finally — a reunion in the city where they first met.

A carefully charted map of a long-distance relationship, Jennifer E. Smith’s new novel shows that the center of the world isn’t necessarily a place. It can be a person, too.

Jennifer E. Smith has a knack for writing super cute contemporary romances. Sometimes they are excellent, and sometimes they are just merely adorable. Which isn’t a bad thing at all, obviously. I love adorable things always. But when you know an author is capable of excellent, like I know Jennifer E. Smith is (I’m talking about Stat Prob), adorable somehow seems like a letdown. Sad face. The good news is, adorable is what THE GEOGRAPHY OF YOU AND ME is, and I enjoyed it just fine.

So this story begins with a blackout, and two kids getting stuck in an elevator together. One of them, Lucy, comes from a super wealthy family who lives on one of the NYC apartment building’s top floors. Her older brothers are off at college and her parents are those rich, continental, “we travel all the time and leave our kid by herself” couples. Owen, on the other hand, lives with his father in the basement, an apartment pity-given to them so that Owen’s dad could get work as the building’s super following his wife’s death. When the two teens are trapped in the elevator together, they wind up spending the whole afternoon and night together. Not like THAT, though. Just talking and maybe feeling some things and looking at the stars and it’s lovely. But in the morning, they go back to their own lives and wind up leaving the building where they had their little meet-cute pretty much right away for various reasons. They spend the next few years moving around and keeping in touch sporadically, but even though they are each in new places and experiencing new things, they can never seem to forget that blackout.

So first things first: THE GEOGRAPHY OF YOU AND ME is sweet. Lucy and Owen are sweet together, for all that they only really spend a few hours together at first. They have this instant sense of “You are someone I’d like to spend time with,” but in a really lovely way. Their connection is tentative but touching. It’s obvious (or it was the way I read it) that they feel like they can have a connection beyond just the few hours they spend in the elevator, and later, on the roof of their building, stargazing. The sense of promise that hangs around them makes it that much more bittersweet when Lucy moves to Edinburgh with her parents and Owen sets off on a road trip with his grieving dad, and any opportunity for their little sprout of a maybe-relationship is squashed.

But they manage to keep in touch through really fun little notes. I loved that they did things old school and sent REAL MAIL. I just thought that was endlessly charming. I love real mail. It’s so much more personal and intimate. And I loved that Owen and Lucy were sending each other these little one-liner postcards, basically just to say, “Hey. Thought of you today.” Like I said: ADORABLE.

I appreciated the reality of their situation, though. They were never really together in any formal sense at all, so when Lucy moves to Edinburgh and meets a cute boy, it felt real that she would have feelings for him. And when Owen meets a girl out west when he and his father have settled down in Portland, it was bittersweet but real that whatever feelings he had for Lucy had tempered to a point where he wanted to be with someone else. I liked that Jennifer E. Smith didn’t make it so that they were pining away for one another hard from thousands of miles away after just a short time together.

And one thing that Jennifer E. Smith never shorts her characters on is other issues. Relationships are never the only things going on in her books, and Lucy and Owen are certainly no exception. Lucy is struggling as always to find a place to fit in. She doesn’t really have many friends at school and gets lost in her family, when she even sees them. Her absentee parents are not bad people, but it would be hard for someone not to take that kind of abandonment personally eventually. And Owen is coping with the death of his beloved mother while trying to keep his dad from letting his own grief drag him under. I liked their relationship. It’s not very often that we see father-son relationships in YA–or not, at least, in the books I read–so it was nice to see in THE GEOGRAPHY OF YOU AND ME.

So what’s the deal, then? I don’t think I’ve said one bad thing about this book. Why wasn’t I blown away with THE GEOGRAPHY OF YOU AND ME? It’s hard to say. I think my expectations were high because I still remember reading Stat Prob and legit crying over Hadley and her relationship with her dad. There were emotions there that were missing for me from THE GEOGRAPHY OF YOU AND ME, and so even though I liked it a lot and had warm fuzzies all over the place, it still didn’t meet the bar I have set for Jennifer E. Smith’s books. The double-edged sword of writing a book that gets to readers, I guess.

Still, if you like Jennifer E. Smith’s books like I do, then THE GEOGRAPHY OF YOU AND ME is one you should read. Lucy and Owen are adorable but not perfect, so that’s always a bonus. And the family issues they are dealing with are real but not melodramatic, I didn’t think, so that’s always good, too. PLUS! Travel! Road trips! Scotland! I approve! And I very much enjoyed how Lucy and Owen made such an impression on each other that, despite miles and years, they still thought of one another.

Check out some other reviews of The Geography of You and Me by Jennifer E. Smith!

Estelle @ Rather Be Reading: “The way [Lucy and Owen] miss each other is never angsty or dramatic either… it feels incredibly natural — all due to Smith’s gorgeous and thoughtful writing.”

Alexa @ Alexa Loves Books: “Jennifer E. Smith’s latest young adult novel The Geography of You and Me is like a caramel sundae – delightful to the taste, but perhaps a touch too sweet for those who aren’t overly fond of dessert or, in this case, fluffy romance.”

Comments

  1. I have to admit I am more interested in reading the book you compared this one to but I might read this one first and then that one. Thanks for the review. ~Sheri

  2. First, thanks so much for including my link on here. 🙂

    Second, I was worried about this one because HAPPY did not make me Happy and I like to be Happy when I read JES books. But Geography brought me back to what I love about her. Yes for the realistic portrayal of this friendship/connection/relationship. I loved the back and forth between these two, those unexpected times when they pop up in each other’s lives, and how they never let whateveritwasthathappenedbetweenthem stop them from doing anything.

    It was a very MATURE way to look at a young relationship, and I think it’s one of JES’ strengths.