Skin
Deep – Laura
Jarratt
Pages: 378
Publisher: Electric
Monkey (Egmont UK)
Release Date: 5th
March 2012
‘I wanted to say this morning,
only you ran off...Sorry if I was rude.’ The boy from the boat grinned, looking
straight at me. ‘You surprised me, that’s all. The scar,’ – he touched his face
– ‘took me by surprise. I didn't mean to be rude.’ I gaped at him. Nobody ever,
ever mentioned the scars.
After the car crash that leaves
her best friend dead, Jenna struggles to rebuild her life. But every stare in
the street, every glance in the mirror, makes her want to hide away. And then
Ryan turns up – a tall, good-looking traveller unlike anyone Jenna’s met
before.
Can he help put her world back
together, or will he just break her heart?
I’d
heard next to nothing about Skin Deep when
I started reading it. I went in with no expectations; I didn't know whether it
would be funny, sad, sweet, emotional or swoon-worthy – it was all of them.
Laura
Jarrat immediately suckered me in with dual narration; the alternate chapters
told in Ryan and Jenna’s distinctive voices ensured I devoured Skin Deep in two sittings. Now, Ryan is
fascinating. His narration is full of the language and cadence of a teenage
boy’s voice and feels authentic and so real. He is frank, honest and straightforward,
for the most part, and is also sensitive (as much as he hates that) and
incredibly, incredibly sweet. With the bigotry that is directed towards Ryan
once the village discovers he’s a traveller, he becomes even more special.
As
you get further into the story, Skin Deep
becomes much more than a novel about looking underneath surface, whether
that is disfiguring scars or how they live. Mental illness is touched on
sensitively and realistically and in a way that made my heart ache for all of
the characters that are affected. But the issue of Jenna’s scars are of course
at the forefront of the novel. I can’t even to begin to imagine dealing with
not only your life being changed like that, but also dealing with the death of
your best friend.
The
way that Jenna’s face is met by the rest of the village makes me angry and want
to cry for her at the same time. Her strength and resilience grew as Skin Deep continued and Ryan taught her
that not everyone would recoil from her, that she could still be loved and how
to stare right back when people stared at her. There were still glimpses of a
young girl struggling with herself, however – she had screaming fights with her
parents, burst into tears often, and doubted that anyone could ever love her or
look at her in the same way again. I have to admit that there was one point in
the novel that I went ‘Woah, she’s young. Maybe I’m a little too old for
this...’, but then I got over it and carried on loving it!
Skin Deep takes
an unexpected turn in the latter part of the novel that really adds another
dimension to Jenna, Ryan and the themes of the novel. The chapters becoming
shorter and sharper as the tension rises strengthen this. It’s a brilliantly
clever technique that really made a dfference and kept me racing through the
pages to the end.
I
finished Skin Deep with a cheesy,
stupid grin plastered to my face and a conviction that I have to make sure I
read whatever Laura Jarrat writes next.
I’d
now like to welcome Laura to So Many Books, So Little Time to share with us the
songs on Jenna and Ryan’s iPod’s:
Jenna:
·
'Brick
by Boring Brick' – Paramore
For those times when
she’s tempted to retreat into the world in her head because it’s just too scary
out there to deal with
·
'Shine
On' – The Kooks
Because she wishes
someone felt this way about her…before Ryan turns up obviously!
·
'Airplanes'
– B.o.B
This is something she
plays to remember Lindsay, and wishes Lindz was still around to feel like this
·
'Never
Let Me Go' – Florence and the Machine
This is how she feels
after the accident
·
Titanium
– David Guetta ft. Sia
For when Steven is
getting to her; this would make her playlist about halfway through the book
when she’s feeling stronger.
Ryan:
Ryan’s mix is more eclectic than Jenna’s, which is a reflection of him and
because he’s listened to a lot of Cole’s stuff too
·
'Good
Riddance (Time of Your Life)'
His moving-on song,
to get his head in gear to leave people and places behind
·
'Use
Somebody' – Kings of Leon
Without putting a
huge spoiler in here, this is a track that means something to Ryan in the
latter half of the book…
· 'I’m
Yours' – Jason Mraz
A mood song for when
he and Jenna get together
·
'Earthquake'
– Labrinth ft. Tinie Tempah
This is his feel-good
song; it just gives him a buzz – probably because he’s more Karen’s son than he
admits to and there’s a definite anarchic streak in this one
·
'Iris'
– Goo Goo Dolls
One he first
discovered in Cole’s collection; for Jenna…
A
big thank you to Electric Monkey for sending me a review copy and for involving
me in the blog tour.
Sophie
Fab review and playlists! I've seen so many good reviews for this it's now going on the wish list!
ReplyDeleteI'm reading this book right now - it's wonderful! I love the characters and the way the two different narratives weave together. Thank you for a great post, Sophie and Laura!
ReplyDeleteYou have a new follower!! Great review! I haven't read this (yet), buyt I am going to add it to my TBR (to be read) list. Feel free to follow me too!
ReplyDeletewww.teenbookguru.com
This is definitely going on my to-read list!
ReplyDeleteSaw this in the shops recently and now regret picking it up! Awesome review, and thanks Laura for the fab playlists ;)
ReplyDelete