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Rocky Callen

Author of A Breath Too Late

3 Works 161 Members 7 Reviews

Works by Rocky Callen

A Breath Too Late (2020) 97 copies, 5 reviews
Crashing into You (2024) 15 copies

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Reviews

7 reviews
In a Nutshell: An anthology talking about mental health issues in young adults, written by PoC authors who have actually gone through the same either themselves or through a family member. Great theme, great rep, thought-provoking and varied content.

This collection of sixteen stories begins with a brilliant note by the editors. Did you know that the US Surgeon General has issued a warning about a national youth mental health crisis? Or that 49.5% of adolescents are suffering from or have show more suffered some mental health disorder at some point in their lives? Or that suicide is the second leading cause of death for people between ten and thirty-four in the US? Shocking!

Moreover, the editors highlight how fiction usually portrays characters with mental health issues as quirky. Such an unrealistic depiction doesn’t help those who actually live with the problem.

Such an anthology is then not just a good addition but a must-read to know more about one of the most important prevailing issues affecting youngsters that still gets ignored or dismissed.

Here’s what makes this collection even more special:
♡ All contributors to this anthology have lived experiences of mental health conditions that their protagonists suffer from.

♡ The mental health issue isn’t the main identity of the protagonist but something that impacts their routine life. In other words, the characters are shown as regular humans with mental health problems. No stereotyped pop culture portrayal!

♡ The stories are not just about the common issues just as depression, anxiety or PTSD. I learnt about several new mental health problems through this collection.

♡ As the target audience is the YA age group, every main character is in the same age group, thus making it easier for readers to connect with the protagonist.

♡ While this is an anthology, don’t expect only stories herein. In addition to fictional prose, you also have poems, an epistolary tale, a graphic comic, and a one-act play. Moreover, the stories tackles various genres such as fantasy, contemporary drama, and sci-fi.

♡ The sixteen authors are diverse in ethnic, sexual, religious, and gender backgrounds, as well as age and socio economic status, ensuring genuine intersectionality and accuracy of representation.

♡ Each story highlights one point: the importance of support and of not giving up. You are never alone, no matter what your mind tells you. Having someone to speak to makes a world of difference, and every tale reiterates this simple but important message.

♡ There is a personal note from the contributor at the end of each story, detailing their own struggles with mental health issues.

♡ There are detailed resources at the end in case the reader wishes to seek help.

Of the sixteen stories, six reached or crossed the four star mark for me. My absolute favourite was ‘Don't Go Breaking My Heart’ by Anna Drury – a lovely story that warms the heart, and ‘A Body With Holes’ by Ebony Stewart – a brilliant poem highlighting PTSD. Other notable stories for me were ‘They call me Hurricane’ by Rocky Callen, ‘Peculiar Falls’ by Jonathan Lenore Kastin, ‘A Bridge Over Silence’ by Karen Jialu Bao, and ‘Almost Beautiful’ by Marcella Pixley.

Keep in mind that I am not a YA, and the YA genre isn’t really my cup of tea. I had picked this collection up more for the theme, and it does perfect justice to it. I am sure a reader belonging to the target age group would appreciate this collection even more. That said, I wouldn’t restrict the target audience only to YAs with mental health problems. All of us need to read more and genuine portrayals of characters with such problems so that we can not only ask for help if we need to, but offer help when it seems to be required.

A tiny wave of support to that amazing title: having a mental health issue is definitely not AbNormal but Absolutely Normal. Brilliant!

3.6 stars, based on the average of my ratings for the stories.

My thanks to Candlewick Press and Edelweiss+ for the DRC of “Ab(solutely) Normal: Short Stories That Smash Mental Health Stereotypes”. This review is voluntary and contains my honest opinion about the book.

———————————————
Connect with me through:
My Blog | The StoryGraph | Instagram | Facebook | Twitter
show less
In a Nutshell: An anthology talking about mental health issues in young adults, written by PoC authors who have actually gone through the same either themselves or through a family member. Great theme, great rep, thought-provoking and varied content.

This collection of sixteen stories begins with a brilliant note by the editors. Did you know that the US Surgeon General has issued a warning about a national youth mental health crisis? Or that 49.5% of adolescents are suffering from or have show more suffered some mental health disorder at some point in their lives? Or that suicide is the second leading cause of death for people between ten and thirty-four in the US? Shocking!

Moreover, the editors highlight how fiction usually portrays characters with mental health issues as quirky. Such an unrealistic depiction doesn’t help those who actually live with the problem.

Such an anthology is then not just a good addition but a must-read to know more about one of the most important prevailing issues affecting youngsters that still gets ignored or dismissed.

Here’s what makes this collection even more special:
♡ All contributors to this anthology have lived experiences of mental health conditions that their protagonists suffer from.

♡ The mental health issue isn’t the main identity of the protagonist but something that impacts their routine life. In other words, the characters are shown as regular humans with mental health problems. No stereotyped pop culture portrayal!

♡ The stories are not just about the common issues just as depression, anxiety or PTSD. I learnt about several new mental health problems through this collection.

♡ As the target audience is the YA age group, every main character is in the same age group, thus making it easier for readers to connect with the protagonist.

♡ While this is an anthology, don’t expect only stories herein. In addition to fictional prose, you also have poems, an epistolary tale, a graphic comic, and a one-act play. Moreover, the stories tackles various genres such as fantasy, contemporary drama, and sci-fi.

♡ The sixteen authors are diverse in ethnic, sexual, religious, and gender backgrounds, as well as age and socio economic status, ensuring genuine intersectionality and accuracy of representation.

♡ Each story highlights one point: the importance of support and of not giving up. You are never alone, no matter what your mind tells you. Having someone to speak to makes a world of difference, and every tale reiterates this simple but important message.

♡ There is a personal note from the contributor at the end of each story, detailing their own struggles with mental health issues.

♡ There are detailed resources at the end in case the reader wishes to seek help.

Of the sixteen stories, six reached or crossed the four star mark for me. My absolute favourite was ‘Don't Go Breaking My Heart’ by Anna Drury – a lovely story that warms the heart, and ‘A Body With Holes’ by Ebony Stewart – a brilliant poem highlighting PTSD. Other notable stories for me were ‘They call me Hurricane’ by Rocky Callen, ‘Peculiar Falls’ by Jonathan Lenore Kastin, ‘A Bridge Over Silence’ by Karen Jialu Bao, and ‘Almost Beautiful’ by Marcella Pixley.

Keep in mind that I am not a YA, and the YA genre isn’t really my cup of tea. I had picked this collection up more for the theme, and it does perfect justice to it. I am sure a reader belonging to the target age group would appreciate this collection even more. That said, I wouldn’t restrict the target audience only to YAs with mental health problems. All of us need to read more and genuine portrayals of characters with such problems so that we can not only ask for help if we need to, but offer help when it seems to be required.

A tiny wave of support to that amazing title: having a mental health issue is definitely not AbNormal but Absolutely Normal. Brilliant!

3.6 stars, based on the average of my ratings for the stories.

My thanks to Candlewick Press and Edelweiss for the DRC of “Ab(solutely) Normal: Short Stories That Smash Mental Health Stereotypes”. This review is voluntary and contains my honest opinion about the book.

———————————————
Connect with me through:
My Blog | The StoryGraph | Instagram | Facebook | Twitter
show less
This must have been an extremely difficult book to write, but what a terrific result! I worked in mental health for 27 years and there were nights when I was unable to sleep when I counted the number of people I knew who had killed themselves. It was a scary number. In A Breath Too Late, we follow Ellie from the moment she realizes she's dead, back and forth between her attempted interactions with her parents and the boy she loved both in the past and in the days immediately following her show more suicide. We experience her extreme despair, regrets, anger and insights until her mother comes to an important, but all too late realization. A book this powerful deserves a place in every single library where teens (and everyone, quite honestly) who are dealing with mental health issues, particularly depression, can read it. show less
Achingly beautiful. What happens to those you leave behind? This was a hard read, painful. Depression is a real thing and if it cuts deep enough, it will lead to an end you cannot come back from. I wanted to reach into the book and kill the father and shake the mother awake. I can’t write Anymore without offering spoilers. Just that this statement stuck with me: Hope can be found in the darkness.

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Associated Authors

Nikki Grimes Contributor
James Bird Contributor
Marcella Pixley Contributor
Francisco X. Stork Contributor
Patrick Downes Contributor
Karen Bao Contributor
Isabel Quintero Contributor
Sonia Patel Contributor
Mercedes Acosta Contributor
Ebony Stewart Contributor
Alechia Dow Contributor
Anna Drury Contributor
Val Howlett Contributor

Statistics

Works
3
Members
161
Popularity
#131,050
Rating
½ 4.3
Reviews
7
ISBNs
14
Languages
1

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