Cover Image: Road Signs That Say West

Road Signs That Say West

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Member Reviews

No the best written story I've ever read, but I liked the premise: three sisters and a road trip across the country. What could not be good about this?! So the characters aren't really well developed, the plot meanders a bit, people come and go.... it's a road trip and a light summer read! So what! It's still a fun story! Have a lazy summer day? Pull up to a shady spot, park and read this story. Nothing deep, nothing complicated, but maybe you'll be inspired to take a road trip of your own. Oh, and the ending? Non-existing! It just meanders off and you can think of your own! And that is ok!

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This book wasn't the one for me. I had to struggle through it and I found the story lacking. There was a lot of potential, but the writing style wasn't my cup of tea.

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The plot was interesting enough, sadly the writing style was too disjointed to let me connect with any of the characters. Its development, that was supposed to be emotional, fell flat.

Boring, mediocre, and with a terrible ending.

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<a target= _blank href="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-KmAuFPH7WoU/Vpk7CACss5I/AAAAAAAAFvw/6bj4ozMqtSc/s1600/Book%2BFrigate.png" imageanchor="1" ><img hspace="10" align="left" src="https://4.bp.blogspot.com/-KmAuFPH7WoU/Vpk7CACss5I/AAAAAAAAFvw/6bj4ozMqtSc/s320/Book%2BFrigate.png"></a>
<font face="Georgia"> <h3>Welcome to another session of Turning Pages!</h3>

<p><i><b>Synopsis</b></i>: <b>A content warning for suicide and troubling attention from adult men.</b>When their parents depart on their long-planned for trip to Europe, 19-year-old Hanna springs the plan on her sisters, Megan and Claire - to take Mom's car the following day and go on a cross-country drive, from the Atlantic to the Pacific, Nova Scotia to Vancouver. Adventure, in the form of the Trans-Canada Highway is just a breath away - if they'll agree to it. 17-year-old Megan's not interested. She has a job and a life plan, to get fit for swim team tryouts come the fall, and she wants to stick to it. She likes adventure in measured, planned doses, nothing spur-of-the-second, like Hanna seems to always be. Claire, at fifteen, idolizes her older sisters, and only wants peace. If Hanna offers adventure, Claire wants to make sure she gets in on it - and that Megan goes along. And she does -- grudgingly -- briefly helping Claire create the united front of sisterhood. It lasts -- briefly -- until cracks begin to show.</p>

<p>There are other road-trippers along the way, hitchhikers, families, street buskers. Like a friendly butterfly, Hanna seems to alight on each one and engage with them, much to Megan's bitter observation. Aren't the sisters enough? Why does Hanna always have to <i>go</i>? Why can't she be average, like everyone else? She quits everything she starts - first University, then her nannying job in Italy, and now their big sisterhood trip. She talks them into attending the weddings of strangers, of bowling and partying, and she's not paying enough attention to Claire. She's such a sucky big sister.</p>

<p>There's something Hanna and Megan aren't telling Claire - something that happened with Hanna in Italy. Sometimes, Claire hates being the youngest, gets tired of keeping the peace between Megan's acid tongue and Hanna's blithe merriness. Can't Megan see there's something wrong with Hanna? No... of course not. Megan's suddenly got a crush on one of the people they meet along the road - and it's flaring up faster than Claire's ever seen. Hanna keeps disappearing, and Megan doesn't even notice. And, neither of her sisters can quite see that not all is well with Claire, either. </p>

<p>What started out as a lark turns into something deeper and broader, as the last summer three sisters are together ebbs and flows. They share a closeness and silently affirm their love, even as their good time eventually fades, like all things do, into memory.</p>

<a target= _blank href="https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-4k4Fkc05FCw/WPkKIyWkO-I/AAAAAAAAG5w/Vt6Or7ZGqaMMvndxbFUFUn6UuecT7wJAQCLcB/s1600/32171679.jpg" imageanchor="1" ><img hspace=10 align=right border="0" src="https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-4k4Fkc05FCw/WPkKIyWkO-I/AAAAAAAAG5w/Vt6Or7ZGqaMMvndxbFUFUn6UuecT7wJAQCLcB/s400/32171679.jpg" width="275" height="400" /></a><p><i><b>Observations</b></i>: This is a quiet book, a literary book, and a difficult story to cram between two plain paper covers. A sisterly Bildungsroman is both vast and deep; it covers the happenings over a summer, but also the tendencies of a lifetime thus far, in a way. The narrative is more a series of observations from inside the mind of each girl, and isn't always seamless. The "head-hopping" can be frustrating for a reader seeking a typical narrative with a rising narrative arc, and this book might be more appropriate to an older reader. I think it crosses over well into being an adult read.</p>

<p> Things happen in this novel, and yet, not much does. It's a road trip; there are long silences, periods of silent anger, spontaneous, giddy parties with strangers, and a lot of examining internal thoughts. Hanna thinks a lot about the terrible job in Italy, and the way it ended, with confusion and accusation of things which didn't happen - but things which, she is ashamed to admit, she <i>dreamed</i> of happening. Are we responsible for our dreams? Because we might want something, does that make us as bad as if we'd reached out and tried to take it? Does that mean we attract more of the same? Is it our fault?</p>

<p>Megan seems merciless; unforgiving, exacting, keeping count of how many times Hanna has disappointed her, to the detriment of her own enjoyment of life, and of her seeing Claire as anything but Hanna's yes-woman. When she finally thaws, her sisters are surprised -- but she freezes up again quickly. The novel unfortunately doesn't spend as much time with Megan, or on expository dialogue to help the reader see her inner mind, and the reader is left wondering what she really wants, except for her sister, Hanna, to stop leaving her behind. Her prickly resentfulness is shown at the end as a held-over childhood resentment, which makes her seem more pathetic than angry.</p>

<p>Claire's loss is recent enough that the shock hasn't finished with her. She's walking wounded, but doesn't know it, until she sits down long enough for the thoughts to filter through. It hits her, on this trip, that the friend she lost is never coming back, ever. She doubts herself, and second-guesses all of the conversations she had. Why hadn't she seen it coming? What does it say about her, that she missed so much pain? What if it happens again? Suddenly, Claire feels like a tiny speck in a massive world that has spun out of control... and her sadness is so great that it's crushing her. Maybe this is how her friend had felt, too...</p>

<p>The novel ends with trailing threads, and for some, the end will seem jarring. But, a road is a constant, just as the narrative of sisterhood and the process of growing, maturing, and separating is a common experience, in many ways. This constantly shifting narrative means that some things aren't resolved in this novel - bitterness remains bitter 'til the end, losses still pain, good times are ephemeral. The road goes on, but the one thing that remains is sisterhood. Despite everything, these girls will always be related.</p>

<p><i><b>Conclusion</b></i>: Definitely not for the common crowd, this novel is made up of the pauses between growing pains, and will find its audience among those who have wished to draw closer to their families and see them as complex and enigmatic human beings, instead of the familiar souls they've always known. Perfect for people transitioning through stages of life, and wondering what more is out there. </p>
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<hr width=55%><p>I received my copy of this book courtesy of the publishers. After May 1, you can find <a href="http://www.indiebound.org/aff/readersrant7?product=9781772780239" target=_blank><i>ROAD SIGNS THAT SAY WEST</i></a> by Sylvia Gunnery at an online e-tailer, or at a real life, independent bookstore near you!</p>
<p>This review will post 25th April.</p>
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Seeing as I am a huge fan of road trip novels, I couldn't wait to dive into this one. This book had the ability to be all the things, unfortunately, it turned out to be, well, none of them.

The beginning was strong, I will give this book that. The little sibling arguments and rivalry was realistic enough, but the book's overall execution left something to be desired. I felt like this book could have been much longer than it was, perhaps even somehow broken into several novels. It seemed more of an overview than a full-length novel. This left me not only unable to feel like I was truly experiencing a road trip(something I've felt in the past when reading some of my favorite road trip novels), but it also left me completely unable to connect with the characters. Sadly, that made them mostly unlikable to me. This is not to say the novel didn't have its bright points, it did. Some of my favorite scenes involved following a character that had a small, supporting role. That said, having extra viewpoints outside of the sisters sometimes left me a bit confused about what was going on. So many side stories were never resolved, and the ending was honestly very abrupt. I so, so wanted to love this book and I do not take negative feedback lightly. However, unless there is plans for future novels in a series this book left way too many loose ends for me to feel comfortable recommending it. If you want an okay read and are cool with not having all your questions answered then, by all means, give it a try! There was a lot to love within the pages, it just didn't do it for me overall.

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I received this ARC from Netgalley in exchange for an honest review.

Road trip books are always a good read when done well. This book had a lot of potential with 3 sisters driving from Nova Scotia to Vancouver. The problem is that it read like an outline.

Each of the girls has a background, but we're given the briefest of details. I don't think Megan had anything aside from being a killjoy. The roadtrip itself feels rushed from place to place. Canada from East to West is quite a distance, but it didn't seem like they were driving far. I feel like I was reading someone hitting the points of a novel as opposed to reading the novel. That may be because the writing style didn't work.

This book has great potential, but needs serious fleshing out.

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