All the Bright Places - Book Review
- asmiaggarwal9
- Jul 13, 2023
- 2 min read
All the Bright Places is one of my favorite books of all time, and honestly, it acted as a catalyst that inspired me to start being happier. After reading this book, I've been looking at the world a in a very different way, and for this reason, I can’t even remember how many times I've re-read it. It spreads awareness on the topic of suicide, the importance of balanced mental health, overcoming grief, etc. through a captivating and lovely yet heart-breaking plot. I was seriously invested, and this is the kind of book where it is practically impossible not to finish in one sitting.
The story follows outcast Theodore Finch, a boy with Bipolar disorder who struggles to find his identity/will to live in a harsh world and popular Violet Markey, a girl who blames herself for the death of her late sister and consequently feels like her future is in pieces. Both teens have a similar mindset at the beginning of the book where they meet on the ledge of the bell tower, and it is ‘unclear about who saves whom.’
I’ve read a lot of books, and I haven’t found one just like this. I was just walking through a Barnes and Nobles and got caught by the cool cover. Although Gen Z is extremely understanding and, in my opinion, more open/free compared to others, there is still a fair amount of stigma that comes with the discussion of sensitive topics such as the ones in this book. All the Bright Places isn’t just another book explaining why suicide is bad. It touches and talks about these topics in a way that no other novel can- any other book I’ve seen about suicide just seems kind of fake… and after reading the author’s note, the experiences and thoughts and memories in this book seem so genuine because they are real. The author herself has gone through these losses, mindsets, and abstract thoughts, which make the book feel that much alive. Another bonus is that this book really cultivated my love for women modernist authors like Virginia Woolf (one of my favorites- if not favorite writer) and Sylvia Plath. Jennifer Niven really has a way with really making you feel like you are loved and aren’t alone with your experiences, so this is one book I would have to recommend :)
Stay sunny,
Asmi.
(P.S. Jennifer Niven got inspired by one of her own original ideas by one of her own original characters in the book, and decided to make a blog! It’s called GermMagazine.com!)
(P.S. #2, another book by her Holding up the Universe is also amazing and touches on important teen mental health topics, too)
Comments