| Nicola Yoon |
| ISBN 9780553496680 |
| Delacorte Press, 2016. |
| A 2016 National Book Award Finalist |
5 stars |
| Keywords: national-book-award nicola-yoon sun-is-also-a-star teens |
The Sun Is Also A Star
by Nicola Yoon
The Sun Is Also A Star by Nicola Yoon (author of Everything, Everything) is one of the most stunning
books that I have read this year. It is a love story, it is an immigration
story, it is a story of two people, and yet, a story of the universe.
The entire story takes place
throughout the span of a day—less than 24 hours in New York City. The story
alternates between Natasha Kingsley and Daniel Jae Ho Bae, with a few other
points of view along the way. Natasha is an immigrant from Jamaica. She has lived
in the United States for most of her life. On her last day in the United States,
the day The Sun Is Also A Star takes
place, she is trying all that she can to stop her family’s deportation back to
Jamaica. Daniel, on the other hand, is a first generation Korean-American,
meaning that his parents moved to the United States, and he has full
citizenship. On the day he meets Natasha, he is on his way to a college
interview, so he can become a doctor at Yale like his parents want. What he wants is to write poetry.
The
Sun Is Also A Star is a novel that examines all the tiny ways in which
human lives collide, and the way in which your actions can create a ripple
effect. Natasha, a budding scientist, believes in “observable facts.” She
thinks that love is just a series of chemical reactions. But when she meets
Daniel, she has to admit that maybe there is something more.
The Sun Is Also A Star is a beautiful and very real examination of the immigrant experience. How immigrants, especially, know that their lives turn out differently than what they expected. People leave behind homes and family for a strange land where the language is unfamiliar. They can only hope they are allowed to stay and not be deported. They can only hope for a better life for their family. The future is not foreseeable, but every action has a consequence. Loving, even for a short amount of time, is better than not loving at all.
“They have a sense that the length of a day is mutable, and
you can never see the end from the beginning. They have a sense that love
changes all things all the time.
That’s what love is for.”
Two people bumping into each other on the
street is a minor collision in the gran-scheme universe. What happens
afterwards? A 2016 finalist for the National Book Award, The Sun Is Also A Star will
have you believing in fate, love, and the ways the universe connects all of us.


