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Justin A. Reynolds

Author of Opposite of Always

13+ Works 2,281 Members 32 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Image credit: via Amazon.com

Works by Justin A. Reynolds

Associated Works

Black Boy Joy: 17 Stories Celebrating Black Boyhood (2021) — Contributor — 250 copies, 3 reviews

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Common Knowledge

Gender
male
Occupations
author (novels)
screenwriter
Agent
Beth Phelan
Nationality
USA
Places of residence
Ohio, USA
Associated Place (for map)
Ohio, USA

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Reviews

34 reviews
This starts strong -- Eddie is a funny kid with the ultimate laundry avoidance plan, and his voice is authentic and entertaining. Unfortunately, nothing really happens over the course of the book aside from Eddie's neverending monologues on his every distracted moment passing. He's dealing with a stepfather, the loss of a beloved dad who died 2 years ago, a monumental crush, ADHD, and a mean older brother, so there's a lot to think about. It appears that everyone on earth may have vanished show more from the beach bash after a power outage in the early afternoon, but we don't really know because the book ends with the neighborhood left-behind kids on the morning after, just venturing out to find out where everyone is. So it feels like there is quite an interesting story going on just out of sight, and in the spotlight we have the very authentic Eddie. It's good, but it's hella long for a book where the plot just begins 250 pages in. show less
Computer games may have damaged my outlook on life. See, when things go wrong in cyberspace, you just restart. How well I remember building my Austrian Empire in Civilization V only to see hordes of Mongols crash across my borders en route to my tiny garrisons. I cursed the day and spun up a new game, and I feel it’s unfair you can’t do this when things go wrong in meatspace. But what if you could? What if time rebooted and gave you a second chance to get it right, and a third chance, show more and a fourth?

Justin A. Reynolds’s debut YA novel “Opposite of Always” asks just this question through the character of Jack Ellison King, a graduating high school senior and self-described nerd who is far smoother with girls than any nerd I’ve ever known, starting with myself. Had I had half his swagger with the ladies in high school, it would’ve saved me a lot of nights staring into the dark and replaying the awkward things I’d said and done that, surely, all the girls were laughing about. On that subject, Reynolds nails the teenage boy experience of perceiving girls as poised and perfect beings of light. I know, I know, teenage girls often feel like tragic disasters. Trust me: the guys don’t see it. It’s a strange time of life.

Jack’s inconsistent character does actually break my suspension of disbelief in an otherwise thoughtful story of young adult romance and the second chances we never get. Is Jack a dork or the king of flirty banter? Is he a reservoir of deep passions or is he so unflappable that he just sort of accepts his time loop and tries to make it work? Even Phil Connors broke down and tried to tell people what was happening to him, but Jack King is made of sterner stuff than Pittsburgh’s surliest weatherman. I get that the loop is just a storytelling device for an exploration of love, family, friendship, and the choices that make them what they are; but given the premise, I couldn’t shake the gnawing conviction that a high school kid caught in a time loop should be freaking out at least a little.

Perhaps we can forgive Jack for his preternatural calm since his pubescent brain is overclocked by Kate, the college freshman and woman of his dreams who will always die on the exact same day if he can’t find a way to save her. I confess that even though I’m a crotchety middle-aged man, I really like their relationship. Reynolds handles young love well, striking that balance of adult feelings and childish actions that makes those years so weird, wonderful, and unrepeatable. Parents who are feeling edgy about how handsy their teens might be getting with each other won't be comforted by the progression of Jack and Kate’s relationship; but all things considered, the subject is handled discreetly.

Jack’s adventures in time raise the same conundrum George Bailey faced in Bedford Falls: if you could change your destiny, would it change for the better? Jack’s repeated stabs both at saving Kate and at fixing his friends’ problems might suggest a negative answer, but I couldn’t tell until the final pages which way Reynolds would jump. He plays his cards so well that I wasn’t sure if I was in a morality play (“don’t sacrifice all that’s good in a losing fight with fate”) or a hero’s journey (“no fate but what we make”). Either seems equally plausible right up to the end, and that’s good storytelling. Though the loop becomes a bit tiresome as Jack gradually tinkers his way toward a conclusion, I found myself hoping for happy endings all around. After all, I have regrets enough that I can’t undo. It’s nice to imagine, to hope, that someone else might find a way to skip the regrets entirely.
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This book was wonderful. It has a Groundhog Day premise and reliving the day over and over again until you "get it right" and I'm always a sucker for any kind of time-travel storyline. The first time through the "timeline" I almost forgot it was going to start over because I was just so invested in all the characters and their current arcs. I loved all of the characters in this book which is refreshing after what felt like an interminable spell of unreliable narrator books last year. I think show more it is also difficult to write and rewrite the same story over and over again and keep it interesting but this was very well done. I was vested in the new twists that each new timeline would bring about while also hoping for the final outcome to be one I wanted. A sweet and fun read that I highly recommend. show less
Some of the jokes are corny here (mainly the Miles and Ganke banter) and the sadistic villain is Thanos-adjacent, but I enjoy the characterization of Miles here. Reynolds elevates Miles' narrative voice well.

Sometimes, the real villain is anxiety. The emotional core here is what strengthens this story. When a loved one gets hurt by the villain, Miles is riddled with worry, and that doesn't go away with being the Spider-Man either.

His parents love him very much, and you see it in the way they show more raise him and teach him to be in touch with his emotions. If there are more books planned in this series, then I foresee a strained relationship with Ganke brewing.

Anyway, I liked this!
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Jerry Craft Contributor
Lamar Giles Contributor
Jasmine Warga Contributor
Randy Ribay Contributor
Ryan La Sala Contributor
Natasha Díaz Contributor
Angeline Boulley Contributor
Erin Fitzsimmons Cover designer
Stephanie Singleton Cover artist
A. J. Beckles Narrator

Statistics

Works
13
Also by
2
Members
2,281
Popularity
#11,247
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
32
ISBNs
73
Languages
6
Favorited
1

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