California.
In a modern day setting, Noah and Jude are a set of non-identical twins, with contrasting personalities, who tell their stories in different time frames of their lives. Thirteen years old, and sixteen years old – which I found really intriguing.
How would you describe your relationship with your siblings? If you have siblings, (I don't) you were probably in some way, shape or form were closer to them in the beginning while you were youngsters. I don't know. Was it six, seven, eight, four, five. eleven? Somewhere along those lines. You guys were probably like peanut butter and jelly. Hitting each other in the face and playing ball and making each other cry and getting one another gifts and sticking a booger in one's ear (maybe together, to dad). I mean, we're not getting any younger and I found to have witnessed (in the movies and around the community) that siblings, in often cases, drift apart a little more as they mature.
And, it happens.
It was the yelling. It was the unattended problems. It was the little things. It was the big change.
I strongly recommend this book to those who understand the problems running in today's society, i.e affairs, sudden death. So, it's not really an everyday kindergarten book and preferably read by mature individuals.
This young-adult nonfictional, has a running theme of trying the clear the fog and the teamwork that comes along with it to find the happy ending. The correct question is not, what happened for it to begin but, how it can end.
Oh, and there's also a lingering appearance of a ghost. G-Ma makes comeback 2014.
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