Dear Edward

A Novel

paperback, 384 pages

Published Feb. 2, 2021 by Dial Press Trade Paperback.

ISBN:
978-1-9848-5480-3
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4 stars (12 reviews)

6 editions

Book Review: Dear Edward

4 stars

“I used to have this crazy idea…” He pauses. “And I guess I still do, that as long as I stay on the ground, the plane will stay in the sky. It’ll keep flying on its normal route to Los Angeles, and I’m its counterweight. They’re all alive up there, as long as I’m alive down here.”

– Ann Napolitano, “Dear Edward”

This is one of those books I found myself ripping through in just a few days. “Dear Edward” was gifted to me this past Christmas, and I was unsure if it would be my cup of tea. But I enjoyed this light, sweet, YA coming-of-age story in sad and surreal circumstances.

Twelve-year-old Edward Adler is the sole survivor of the 191 passengers aboard flight 2977 from Newark to Los Angeles. He was sitting together with his father and brother, contemplating their relocation to LA for Eddie's mother's new …

Review of 'Dear Edward' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

I’m always impressed when a novel that jumps back and forth between characters and/or timelines wins me over, and this one certainly justifies the choice and makes the most of it. Napolitano’s rich, warm prose does an excellent job of analyzing the awkwardness of things we take for granted, when examined from an altered perspective, and Edward’s tale of survival and self-discovery is rewarding and uplifting.

Review of 'Dear Edward' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

This is almost a companion book to Before the Fall. Similar story, and both books weave back and forth between the life the survivor tries to build going forward and the lives of those lost leading up to the crash. The main difference is perspective - this one is told from the child survivor’s perspective; the other was from an adult’s view. I’m glad I read both of them. By adopting the child’s point of view, Dear Edward is able to deal not only with the crash but with the ordinary struggles of growing up, and how the two interact.

Review of 'Dear Edward' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Récit de lecture, comme une valse à quatre temps :

1) Le résumé m'a tout de suite donné envie de lire ce roman : Edward, un garçon de douze ans, est le seul survivant du crash d'un avion qui a fait 191 victimes, dont ses parents et son frère aîné.

2) Le début m'a bien plu : pas de mélo, mais une délicatesse dans l'expression des émotions, avec une pudeur bienvenue

3) La suite m'a parfois semblé un peu longue, avec des passages un peu convenus et peut-être un peu moins de finesse dans le récit

4) La fin m'a captivé et ému. J'avais même la chair de poule en lisant certains passages.

Je ne dirais pas que c'est un livre parfait, je pourrais lui reprocher une écriture parfois formatée comme on le voit souvent dans les romans américains, mais c'est très efficace. Le résultat est redoutable : un récit …

Review of 'Dear Edward' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

This is the story of Edward, who – as a 12 yo – is the sole survivor of a commercial airline crash that kills his parents and brother. Splicing two timelines together, the book alternates between taking you hour-by-hour through the flight, acquainting you with a handful of the passengers, and showing Edward's life unfold in the years after, as he wrestles with why he survived and what that means for his life. It's well crafted.

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