Ever since I got a sampler of this at last year’s YALC (Young Adult Literature Convention) I’ve been desperate to read the whole thing and see if I could work out which author wrote which character. See below for my feeble guessing attempts. YALC 2018 is a mere week away with the Floored 7 speaking/signing on Saturday so I’m looking forward to getting my copy signed by these wonderful women (and also taking part in the Floored quiz on Friday night – I wonder if we can get last year’s #QuizYA winning #TeamBarnard back together).
Synopsis
When they got in the lift, they were strangers.
Sasha, who is desperately trying to deliver a parcel; Hugo, who knows he’s the best-looking guy in the lift and is eyeing up Velvet, who knows what that look means; Dawson, who used to be on TV, used to be handsome, and is sincerely hoping no one recognizes him; Kaitlyn, who’s losing her sight but won’t admit it; and Joe, who shouldn’t be here at all, but wants to be here the most.
And one more person, who will bring them together again on the same day every year.
Every day told seven ways in this unique collaborative novel.
Authors
I have read and loved books by each of these authors. Instead of giving you a bio I’ll link you to their Twitter where they hang around being funny and awesome and tell you which one of their other books is my favourite… so far.
Sara Barnard – @saramegan
A Quiet Kind of Thunder
Holly Bourne – @holly_bourneYA
Am I Normal Yet?
Tanya Byrne – @tanyabyrne
Heart-Shaped Bruise
Non Pratt – @NonPratt
Trouble
Melinda Salisbury – @MESalisbury
The Sin Eater’s Daughter
Lisa Williamson – @lisa_letters
The Art of Being Normal
Eleanor Wood – @eleanor_wood
Gemini Rising
A nod also to the illustrations by Laura Callaghan. I especially loved Kait’s illustration progression.
What I Thought
Back in 1994 Sandra Bullock’s character Annie in Speed told us that “relationships that start under intense circumstances, never last.” That film starts in a lift and so does the action in Floored, and it seems from the book’s dedication that so did the inspiration for this story. Clearly Annie is a master of reverse psychology because it seems intense circumstances can bring people together and indeed here it creates a story that I’ll happily keep with me.
This is a contemporary young adult read with common themes such as teen pregnancy, feminism, growing up, deciding where you fit. There’s also diversity in terms of sexuality and disability as well as young characters facing morbidity and mortality.
Each of the six teen characters gets their own chapters and there is an overarching narrator. I don’t think that was meant to be the seventh person in the lift but I could be wrong.
I liked the comedy in it especially the morbid humour in naming their messaging group. The use of text statuses between the group when they weren’t physically together also worked well to advance the story.
I thought it explored friendships really well in terms of how within groups of friends people pair off or create subgroups based on commonality or connection. The time jump forward to the next year reminded me a little of the film Beaches in terms of tone. The shock incident, and meeting, happens early on and the story is then about how they stay in touch or drift apart. It didn’t feel slow paced though and this structure allowed a range of experiences to be explored over time.
Not all of the characters are likeable but all of them are interesting and hold your attention during their narration. I didn’t find myself wanting to skip ahead to x’s bit but was fully immersed.
I enjoyed the nods to some of the author’s other books. Melinda’s character Luvian Fen from State of Sorrow is mentioned in Dawson’s chapter, as is Rhys Gold from Sara’s A Quiet Kind of Thunder. What other Easter Eggs did people find?
And reverse long bottoming as a concept is genius. Harsh, but also sadly true in some cases.
In short I really loved this and if you love contemporary I have no doubt you will too. I’d love the authors to considered coming back to these characters 10 & 20 years in the future too. More please.
Who wrote who??
Original guesses after the sampler to which Mel replied Interesting?!
Dawson – Non
Kaitlyn – Sara
Sasha – Holly
Hugo – Tanya
Velvet – Eleanor
Joe – Lisa
Narrator – Melinda
Guesses when re- reading first chapters
Dawson – Non
Kaitlyn – Sara
Sasha – Holly
Hugo – Melinda
Velvet – Eleanor
Joe – Lisa
Narrator – Tanya
Guesses after finishing
Dawson – Non
Kaitlyn – Sara
Sasha – Tanya
Hugo – Melinda
Velvet – Holly
Joe – Lisa
Narrator – Eleanor
In other words I have no clue. I can’t even really fully justify why these were my guesses. Feel? I suspect I am totally wrong.
Anyway all of these ladies can write magnificently separately and together they have blended so well and created a group of characters you will be happy to meet up with time and time again. In fact I’d love to hear more from them.
If you’ve read the book who do you think wrote who? What reasoning do you have?