Happy publication day to Sadie by Courtney Summers!!
St. Martin's Press gifted the eBook version of Sadie to me and I just finished it hours ago. The book goes back and forth between Sadie's point of view and West McCray's podcast, allowing you to know what happens and what the evidence shows might have happened on Sadie's journey of revenge. And yet both points of view allow you to learn new aspects of Sadie's life and motives. This story was full of love, heartbreak, twists, and discovery as she chases her sister's killer for miles. From the first to the last page there is something to be learned about Sadie, and yet she still leaves you guessing because that's just who Sadie is.
Courtney Summers is already known for her well written and dark young adult novels, earning rave starred trade reviews on every book. With a fierce and independent female lead, SADIE (September 4, 2018; Wednesday Books) continues in this vein told in part as a podcast, similar to Serial, about a missing girl determined to avenge her sister’s death. A propulsive and harrowing read that will keep you riveted until the last page, Courtney Summers has written the breakout book of her career.
Sadie hasn't had an easy life. Growing up on her own, she's been raising her sister Mattie in an isolated small town, trying her best to provide a normal life and keep their heads above water. But when Mattie is found dead, Sadie's entire world crumbles. After a somewhat botched police investigation, Sadie is determined to bring her sister's killer to justice and hits the road following a few meager clues to find him. When West McCray—a radio personality working on a segment about small, forgotten towns in America—overhears Sadie's story at a local gas station, he becomes obsessed with finding the missing girl. He starts his own podcast as he tracks Sadie's journey, trying to figure out what happened, hoping to find her before it's too late.
Below you will find an excerpt of Sadie, just in case you need a little bit more convincing to read this book.
COURTNEY SUMMERS lives and writes in Canada. She is the author of What Goes Around, This is
Not a Test, Fall for Anything, Some Girls Are, Cracked Up to Be, Please Remain Calm, and All the
Rage.
Below you will find a Q&A she did regarding her most recent work.
- Did you experience more difficulty writing one or the other, or did you like writing in one form more? How much of the novel did you write in chronological order, and how much did you jump around?
- I enjoyed both of them. Writing Sadie’s perspective was very familiar to me because all of my books feature an intensely close first person, female point-of-view. Writing West’s perspective, the podcast format, proved a little more challenging. Not so much because of the way it was written (scripts) but because each episode had to propel Sadie’s narrative forward and give us a different way of looking at the things she went through. So far, I’ve only ever been able to write in chronological order!
- Was this how you always envisioned the book or did it change as you wrote it?
- Regina Spektor said something really interesting about writing songs that I’ve always loved and related to as an author. She said, “[A]s soon as you try and take a song from your mind into piano and voice and into the real world, something gets lost and it’s like a moment where, in that moment you forget how it was and it’s this new way. And then when you make a record, even those ideas that you had, then those get all turned and changed. So in the end, I think, it just becomes its own thing and really I think a song could be recorded a million different ways and so what my records are, it just happened like that, but it’s not like, this is how I planned it from the very beginning because I have no idea, I can’t remember.” I feel something similar when writing—the heart of my idea remains intact, but the way it takes its ultimate form is always a little different (or even a lot different) than I might have been expecting, which makes it difficult to recall the starting point. But that’s okay as long as the heart is still there and you’re satisfied with and believe in what you’ve created.
- What was the most surprising thing you learned in creating your characters? Which of your characters do you most identify with, and why?
- When I first started Sadie, I was extremely skeptical of West—he had to prove himself to readers over the course of his narrative and given the nature of his job, I was curious to see where writing him would take me. I really loved the way his arc unfolded. I wasn’t necessarily surprised by it, but more gratified by it than I realized I would be. I identify with little pieces of all of my characters, but I like to keep those to myself because I don’t want risk readers thinking about me while they read. I like my role as an author to be invisible.
- What gave you the idea for SADIE?
- One of the things that inspired Sadie was the way we consume violence against women and girls as a form of entertainment. When we do that, we reduce its victims to objects, which suggests a level of disposability—that a girl’s pain is only valuable to us if we’re being entertained by it. But it’s not her responsibility to entertain us. What is our responsibility to us? I really wanted to explore that and the way we dismiss missing girls and what the cost of that ultimately is.
- Do you have a favorite scene, quote, or moment from Sadie?
- My favorite moment is a spoiler, but my favorite quote is this: “I wish this was a love story.”
- If you could tell your younger writing self-anything, what would it be?
- I used to have an answer for this kind of question but the older I get, that’s changed. I wouldn’t tell her anything. Her experience as a writer unfolded the way it was supposed to and I like how it’s turning out.