Cover Image: Dear Haiti, Love Alaine

Dear Haiti, Love Alaine

Pub Date:   |   Archive Date:

Member Reviews

I was not as impressed with this book as I thought I would be. I love diverse voices in YA lit and I'm always trying to read as widespread culturally as I can, but the mixed up way the story was told was just something I couldn't get into. Alaine herself was a great character, but the format was just not good for me. Maybe it was because I read an e-arc on my phone, like it would look better on paper, I don't know. A lot of that stuff felt like it disrupted the flow of the story. It gave me an overall negative feel to the book.

Was this review helpful?

I wanted to love this book, I mean look at that cover! Unfortunately I didnt love it at all. It felt pretty flat to me, and even a bit tedious at times. Reading it became more of a chore than an enjoyable task and ultimately I decided not to finish the book. I will agree with others, the formatting of the file was problematic, but not entirely detrimental. I think my expectations were just too high for this one.

Was this review helpful?

"Dear Haiti, Love Alaine" follows seventeen-year-old Haitian American Alaine. Alaine lives in Miami with her father and has a famous mother who is a reporter living in Washington, D.C. Alaine is what I think most people would call "too much." She is definitely intelligent and it seems holds some pain over the fact that her mother is barely around due to her job and late breaking stories. Her actions in this book made my head hurt. She does a prank to get back at someone and almost ends up killing another classmate. She gets suspended although she was initially threatened with being expelled. As a way to make amends at her school she is supposed to do an assignment on her family's history in Haiti.

So Alaine was aggravating. She ends up going back to Haiti to stay with her aunt and mother for two months and learns barely anything I think about the history of the country. Instead this book focuses on her mother and aunt's history, a cousin with her own messed up sense of values, and curses. I think that if the authors had just focused on Alaine that would have worked better. I really wish that we had Alaine exploring Haiti and finding out about the history of the country. She works at her aunt's foundation and is crushing on an intern. They have a lot of IMs and texts to each other and she just stumbles on information about her family by people just giving her that information.

I can't say much about the secondary characters because they barely matter in this book. Alaine's father is written so weird as is the mother. We know that they both came from Haiti, but we don't get into why they got divorced. And the authors try to throw a little out there about why Alaine's mother had her go live with her father full-time but it made zero sense and then you throw in family curses and I just didn't care anymore. Due to the writing style we flip flop all over the place and you can barely focus on anyone.

The writing style was not for me. The authors decided to tell this story via Alaine's online journal I think and also included excerpts from her mother's diary, letters between her aunt, mother, texts, newspaper articles, etc. I felt like I was being stuffed with information and not a lot of it made sense. Also certain words or whole paragraphs here and there were in red. Also sometimes the fonts would be really big and then change all over the place. I have no idea why that was and I hope that's just a weird formatting issue with my ARC and is not going to be issued like this. I get why "House of Leaves" did certain things to make the book more immersive for readers. This book is not "House of Leaves."

The book mainly takes place in Miami and Haiti. You don't get a sense of Miami at all and the authors take more care to describe Haiti. I am disappointed though that I am still left with not knowing much about Haiti besides two women's names who kept getting mentioned: Marie-Madeline Lachenais and Marie-Louise Coidavid. I really wish the authors had gone into more of its history and how the country had changed through the centuries when under Spanish, French, and American rule. I also wanted to hear more about how the people in the country spoke French as well as Creole. I was fascinated by that and it was just thrown here and there as an aside.

The ending was a mess. I don't want to get into it, but good grief I don't know what the authors were aiming for in this story. Curses are real?

Was this review helpful?

NetGalley eArcs are hit-or-miss on formatting, and this one was a clear miss. It's especially disappointing because, as a mixed media book, consistency between the different types of correspondence (via Twitter, emails, journal entries, and more) is important. I wish I had waited and gotten a physical copy of the book to fully appreciate this.

I also debated whether the formatting or the content of the book was the reason for my rating. I was really looking forward to reading this book and learning more about Haiti from authors who have experienced it, and the book delivered on that. I also appreciated Alaine's snark, which shines through during her time in the US and in Haiti. Unfortunately, the book deviates from exploring the relationships between Alaine and her relatives (namely, her mother) in favor of scattered side plots--including a family curse--and the inclusion of multimedia correspondence from peripheral characters.

Was this review helpful?

I struggled to read this because the formatting of the digital copy was so off. There were times when the story moved on but I didn’t realize and it confused me. I had to DNF this Netgalley but I plan on grabbing a finished copy so I can read it how it’s intended to be read.

Was this review helpful?

The titular Alaine, a first generation Haitian-American living in Miami, had never been to the homeland before being extra at school one too many times nearly got her expelled and packed off to stay with family in Cap Haitïen and intern at her Tati Estelle's nonprofit, PATRON PAL. Alaine Beauparlant is a raucous kid to begin with, but living with her doctor dad and playing second fiddle (or maybe third or fourth) to her mom's high profile journalist career may cause Alaine to act out more than is strictly necessary. That's my interpretation, anyway. When a bad thing happens to her mom, Alaine gets to spend more time with the famous Celeste Beauparlant. Secrets are revealed and mistakes are made. There's a romance that is mostly on the side, and that I could have done without, but I guess that's what makes YA YA.

I love that the book was written by sisters, one who majored in marketing and earned an MBA and the other, who was a women's studies major and has a master's in journalism. I'm curious about their writing process! And also about the fact that the MBA holder is the one with a bald head.

Alaine's naughty behavior at school, including a tongue-in-cheek telling of the Haitian Revolution reminds me of a snarky response to a chemistry test I was convinced I should use as my college application essay. Ah, privileged, know-it-all youth.

Alaine comes by her snarky communications generationally. He's an excerpt from her mother's high school diary

When I was young enough to still love [my father, Haiti's Minister of Communication], I'd watch as he would lean back in his chair and spin food shortages and riots into "slight agricultural setbacks" and "passionate gatherings." No one in the country believed a word that came out of his office, but he kept the press releases coming, convinced that his time to lead would come soon.

Alaine wants to be a journalist like her mother. Minister of Communications might seem like the opposite of journalism, but it's still writing.

Celeste takes apart a pundit's weirdo claim about the 2010 earthquake being somehow the result of voodoo, "So the countries behind hideous atrocities like colonizing occupied lands and raping and murdering their inhabitants and enslaving millions of people...what has been their retribution?" But that doesn't mean Dear Haiti is without vodou, that is painfully retributive.

Alaine (and the Moulite sisters) share some fun (the opposite of fun) facts about Haitian tourism, which Alaine's aunt Estelle is minister of: Haiti earns just $9 per cruise ship visitor to Labadie, its luxury beach, where tourists come to enjoy the white sand, and do not venture beyond the artificial environment created for them. The real Haiti is a more honest place, as Alaine notes about an exchange between her father Jules, and his childhood friend.

"Well if it isn't Ti Blanc!" he said, referring to my dad as a "white man" the way Haitians routinely did expats or their children.

"Daniel. You have a beautiful family. How are you?" they clapped each other forcefully on the back."

"Not bad. Hungry--but what's new?" I always found it fascinating that Haitians were more likely to tell you the truth about their conditions. No "I'm fine" here, not when the children were so plainly thin."

Despite being about "the poorest nation in the Western hemisphere," as Haiti is repeatedly referred to, to the Beauparlant women's annoyance, Dear Haiti does lightness as well as handles its heavier material.

Was this review helpful?

First off, the cover is STUNNING! 100% why I immediately one-clicked this on Netgalley without even reading the description, and I’m so happy I did! Alaine was a fabulous narrator and I just adored her voice throughout the novel. So snarky and entertaining! I’ve never read much about Haiti aside from high school history classes, so I really enjoyed that aspect of the novel—immersing myself in a new culture and learning more about it. I definitely recommended for fans of YA contemporaries!

**Thanks to Netgalley for giving me this book in exchange for an honest review.

Was this review helpful?

I first need to mention that I read an earc of this book.  The formatting was messed up which made it harder to read.  It's possible that I would have gone up a half star, but I found myself lost during quite a few different parts of the book.  It's also a story told through letters, e-mails, social media, diary type entries, and more.  My arc didn't have chapters, so I'm not sure if the book will.  Hopefully, because I feel it will be easier to follow.



I mostly requested this book because it takes place in Haiti.  I always try to find books to read that will help me see the culture and beauty of another country.  My favorite parts of this book were the stories, scenery, and the curse/vodou stories.  I really wanted to connect with the characters in the book, but I struggled with this part.  Alaine was fun.  I liked that she was funny and sarcastic.  Her project for school made me laugh.  I would have loved more from her best friend, Tatiana.  I did like Jason and wish we would have had more of his interactions with Alaine.



This book mostly focused on family.  Alaine grew up with her dad.  Her mom was a political reporter with her own popular show on TV.  Because her mom was always busy, she often times flaked out on doing things with or for Alaine.  Alaine's mom is everything she wants to be though.  A strong journalist that never falters during her interviews and stories.  That is until she slaps a senator on live TV.  Alaine's mom leaves and goes back home to Haiti, the place she said she'd never return to.  After Alaine's issues at school, she is also sent there to do special work at her aunt's program to help poor children.  Alaine finds out that her mom has very early onset Alzheimer's.  This is shocking and terrifying to Alaine.  She spends time trying to understand her mom's disease, do her work, and learn about her history.  Her aunt gives Alaine her mom's old diaries and Alaine learns of a curse and what four teens did to try to break it.  She gets it into her head that maybe she can break it and her mom will get better.



I enjoyed some parts of the story, but I also found it hard to pick up at times.  Because of that, I gave this 3  1/2 stars (rounded up to 4).  Thank you to the publisher and Netgalley for my review copy.



Warnings for abuse, attempted sexual assault, miscarriage, Alzheimer's, death, curses, voudu, and some very shady business/political dealings.

Was this review helpful?

I was instantly drawn to this book because it's a YA novel set in the Caribbean, and especially set in Haiti a country that doesn't get as much coverage of it's beautiful culture as it does of the struggles of the island. This book is evident of the amazing representation that exists in YA and that the rest of the publishing world needs to get on board with.

Everything about this book sounded like it would be something I would love. I adored the main character. Alaine is a heroine for young women. She has her flaws but her fierce independence and her love for her culture (and learning more about it) make her a strong character.

I did however, experience some issues with the reading experience of this book. There were was just too much going on it it. At over 400 pages, it could have had some of the side plots or a lot of the events leading up to why Alaine was in Haiti taken out and been a truly enjoyable novel. But with all that was included, there were times where I just lost interest, where the book felt like it was trying too hard. Perhaps some of these plots could have been left for the multitude of novels I know that Moulite sisters will be writing in the future.

Was this review helpful?

(Thanks to NetGalley, which kindly provided an ARC in exchange for an honest review.)
Dear Haiti, Love Alaine, the debut novel by Haitian-American authors Maika and Maritza Moulite, chronicles the adventures of sassy, wisecracking Haitian-American protagonist, Alaine Beauparlant. A high school senior and daughter of divorced immigrant parents, Alaine returns to her ancestral homeland of Haiti for a senior service project, joining her mother, famous social and political affairs commentator Celeste, who has retreated to the island following a disastrous professional incident. On the island, Alaine begins interning for a charitable non-profit, finds romance, and uncovers a plethora of family secrets. The novel is epistolary with magical realism elements, and unfolds via a series of texts, emails, and narrative diary entries peppered with pop culture references, giving the book a decidedly contemporary feel. The aforementioned style, however, also arguably creates some fragmentation in the story’s narrative arc, an issue further exacerbated by an error-riddled ARC—several places in the manuscript had omitted passages. Quibbles aside, Dear Haiti, Love Alaine is both entertaining, as well as thought-provoking, providing a lens into Haitian history and culture and addressing the complexities inherent in navigating family and teen relationships.

Goodreads review URL: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/2872093233

Was this review helpful?

This was one of my most highly anticipated books this year. I don't know if it was because this novel has two writers but I found that Dear Haiti, Love Alaine was not quite sure what type of book it wanted to be at times. And there were so many different angles it tried to take. Was it a coming of age book about a teen girl who embraces her West Indian heritage and has a romance with a college boy? The parts of the novel featuring Alaine working with cute intern Jason as her aunt's startup certainly felt that way. Was it an adventure novel about breaking a family curse? Because some of those allusions to blood magic felt like a segway into a fantasy adventure. Though you can't mention Haiti without mentioning vodou. Were they trying to tell a story about about coping with family hardship through the plot with Alaine's mother?

I learned a lot about Haiti from this book. I already have had a bit of a fascination with Haiti culture this year but this just solidified it. It was nice to read about it from a perspective not told by the media. Yes, we know Haiti is poor but there's so much more to the island. Alaine's family on her mother's side is very prominent in the country so they give us a look into the wealthy side of Haitian society. This book also brought into perspective the positive and negatives effects of American aid.

My least favorite part of this novel was the mixed media (social media chats, newspaper articles, emails, letters, postcards,etc) that took me right out of the story each time. Especially since in the ARC they are formatted horribly to the point where you'll be reading one line before it skips to another paragraph and then you find the rest of your sentence after that paragraph. The tone was just different in those parts too.

I rate this book a 3.5. It wasn't perfect and was a little slow in the middle but it picked up at the end and there were many parts I did enjoy.

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

Was this review helpful?

While I did enjoy this book, I didn't love it like I wanted to. I did like Alaine and reading about her relationship with her parents, especially her mother. I also loved getting a look at the culture and history of Haiti.

The writing was good but I was a bit thrown off by the multiple formats that we get here. Speaking of being thrown off, the generational curses was a weird touch as well.

All in all, I did enjoy this one despite some issues and I'm excited to see what these two sisters write next.

Was this review helpful?

Thank you to NetGalley, Harlequin TEEN and Inkyard Press for the advance reader copy of Dear Haiti, Love Alaine by debut authors and sisters, Maika Moulite and Maritza Moulite. Teens will love this action-packed story, narrated by fearless, sassy Alaine, daughter of a psychiatrist and a famous talk show host mom, who finds herself punished for a school joke by being sent to her parents’ home of Haiti. There was so much to love about this story; the rich past and present history of Haiti, a family curse, strong female characters, and a plot that includes lists, emails, letters, transcripts. This is such a diverse, authentic, multi-faceted book with rich storytelling by the Moulite sisters; I loved the cover, Alaine, her aunts, the beauty and poverty of Haiti and all who work tirelessly for Haiti’s survival. Highly recommended!

Was this review helpful?

Dear Haiti, Love Alaine weaves multiple issues of class, identity, and culture in a highly engaging story. Readers will like the multi-faceted format of narrative, emails, and texts that bring depth to the story. This book is perfect for diaspora readers who can relate to the experience of learning about one’s culture. Highly recommend.

Was this review helpful?

I requested to review Dear Haiti, Love, Alaine because I've been to Haiti a few times, and I was interested in a story written by native Haitians and set in Haiti.

The format of the book is interesting. The story is told in the form of journal entries, Twitter chats, emails, news reports, etc. But all of the different "writers" sounded the same. The teacher's email and news report sounded the same a Alaine's diary entries.

A bigger problem was formatting. The font color, size and spacing were confusing. Sometimes entire sentences either appeared out of order, or perhaps they were supposed to have been deleted, but weren't. I'm assuming the formatting problems were because I was reading a prepublished electronic version.

Once Alaine moved to Haiti, the story became more interesting, but also more sloppy. It reminded me of a soap opera - shy on detail and character development, but full of drama. (Spoiler alert) when they suffered a terrible shipwreck, for example, they had watched the sun set on deck but after the wreck, a character's death was called at 17:32 (5:32pm). The flow of the story was a bit random.

I was provided an ARC from NetGalley for my honest review.  #DearHaitiLoveAlaine #NetGalley

Was this review helpful?

Thank you to Harlequin TEEN (US & Canada), Inkyard Press, and NetGalley for providing me with an ARC of this book in exchange for an honest review.

Dear Haiti, Love Alaine follows Alaine, a witty, amibitious, hyperbolic 17-year-old who wants to be an award-winning journalist, just like her mother. Alaine's parents immigrated to the states from Haiti and when Alaine gets into trouble at school, she's sent there to intern at her aunt's non-profit PATRON-PAL, while meeting her extended family and learning more about the country's history.

A large part of the story revolves around Alaine's relationship with her mother who she both idolizes and resents. Her father Jules, a pamphlet-slipping psychologist and anxious baker, is a gentle, dorky-dad type character who really shines. Alaine's relationship with her parents was one of the highlights of the story for me.

I enjoyed learning about Haiti and getting a feel for its culture and history. It was interesting to read about the disparity between rich and poor and how the outside perspective of the country differs from that of its inhabitants. The book was co-written by sisters Maika and Maritza Moulite, but you'd never know as the two blend their voices imperceptibly and the flow is cohesive.

What made the story unique was that it was told through different different elements, such as emails, project assignments, postcards, etc. But formatting mistakes on the e-ARC made it difficult to follow along and kept me from feeling fully immersed in the story. I wish the family curse and Celeste and Estelle's relationship had been fleshed out more, as the relationships were really what this book was about for me.

Was this review helpful?

I absolutely LOVE, LOVE this book! Set both in the United States and in Haiti. Haitian-American teen, Alaine Beauparlant lives with her dad in Miami and her mom is a host of the roundtable debate show, Sunday Politicos.⁣⁣

One day Alaine’s life is flipped upside down after a prank in school goes horrible wrong and her mom has a meltdown on national television. Alaine and her mom head to Haiti to basically get their minds right. While Alaine is trying to adjust to life in Haiti, she uncovers some family secrets about her mom. The writing styles is seamless, filled with so much Haitian Pride, the culture and history! Representation is EVERYTHING!

I laughed and cried, this was such a great read! An absolute must read! 5 out of 5 stars. Thank you, Netgalley & Harper Collins/Inkyard Press for this copy in exchange for an honest review.

Was this review helpful?

First off, what drew me in was the cover, I am a huge fan of illustrated covers. This one definitely stands out. Dear Haiti, Love Alaine is a sweet story about a girl growing up the child of immigrants and how she is navigating her life between America and Haiti and being sent to Haiti opens her eyes to a whole new world.

Story wise the book is great but how it is written and told, is another matter all together. It is told is epistolary format, meaning it is comprised of emails, journal entries, texts and articles to the story. And it would be my first book where the entire thing is told that way, save a few chapters. This made it very hard for me to connect and honestly read, as it is a bit confusing at first. I think it really stood out when told in real time. There wasn't enough in my opinion. During that time Alaine is funny and real.

I do recommend this book for anyone who doesn't mind the format. It does discussion things that should be spoken about more often than not.

Thank you to Netgalley, the Publisher and Authors for gifting me the eARC in turn for my honest review.

Was this review helpful?

I saw this book and immediately fell in love with the cover, because well it’s gorgeous. And while you should never judge a book by its cover I feel that in this case the book is as good as the cover.

The novel centers around the main character Alaine, who seems to be a very self-aware teenager who attends school. Both Alaine’s parents are from Haiti, but they are divorced and she lives with her Dad. Alaine’s mom is an on air reporter and makes a huge mistake slapping a senator on TV, cringe. At the same time Alaine also gets in a little hot water in school, almost getting expelled and both women are shipped to Haiti to take a little time out. Since Alaine is suspended she must go to school in Haiti to make up the credits.

I’ve never read a book that was written through a series of emails, tweets, texts, letters and journal entries but I really loved it.

I also loved the fact that the book also looked at so many aspects of Haiti including immigration, poverty and colonialism that has plagued the people for centuries. I don’t know a lot about Haiti and this prompted me to learn more. Such a great book!

Was this review helpful?

There’s a lot going on in Dear Haiti, Love Alaine! There may be too much plot, going in different directions, almost to confusion for the reader. The story is told through diary entries, text messages, emails, news articles, and narration, which was too abrupt for me as a reader because there were so much plot happening. A flow, segue, or connection would’ve helped. With that being said I enjoyed the family relationships and the setting of Haiti. Having the story set in Haiti, along with some history, is much needed for a diverse novel.

Was this review helpful?