Search This Blog







2025 Cover Lovers Reading Challenge (hosted by Yours Truly)

2025 Literary Escapes Challenge
- Alabama (1)
- Alaska (2)
- Arizona (2)
- Arkansas (2)
- California (11)
- Colorado (3)
- Connecticut (1)
- Delaware (2)
- Florida (2)
- Georgia (1)
- Hawaii (1)
- Idaho (1)
- Illinois (1)
- Indiana (1)
- Iowa (3)
- Kansas (1)
- Kentucky (1)
- Louisiana (2)
- Maine (5)
- Maryland (1)
- Massachusetts (4)
- Michigan (2)
- Minnesota (2)
- Mississippi (1)
- Missouri (1)
- Montana (1)
- Nebraska (1)
- Nevada (1)
- New Hampshire (1)
- New Jersey (3)
- New Mexico (1)
- New York (9)
- North Carolina (4)
- North Dakota (1)
- Ohio (1)
- Oklahoma (2)
- Oregon (3)
- Pennsylvania (2)
- Rhode Island (1)
- South Carolina (1)
- South Dakota (1)
- Tennessee (1)
- Texas (2)
- Utah (3)
- Vermont (3)
- Virginia (2)
- Washington (5)
- West Virginia (1)
- Wisconsin (1)
- Wyoming (1)
- Washington, D.C.* (2)
International:
- Australia (6)
- Canada (3)
- England (18)
- France (3)
- Greece (2)
- Italy (1)
- Japan (1)
- Norway (1)
- Puerto Rico (1)
- Scotland (2)
- Vietnam (1)


2025 POPSUGAR Reading Challenge



2025 Build Your Library Reading Challenge









Thursday, February 02, 2017
Hopeful, Exciting The Forgetting a Perfect Read for the New Year
7:13 AM
(Image from Barnes & Noble)
The walled city of Canaan provides a safe, protected atmosphere for its small population. Citizens go to school, work their jobs, care for their families, and—most important of all—write daily entries in the books they keep on their person at all times. They're instructed to pen only the truth. Fanciful scribblings will not help them when the Forgetting comes. Only honesty will let them remember who they are when the veil of forgetfulness drops over Canaan and everyone's memories are wiped clean. Without a book, a person has no identity, no family, no position in the community. They are Lost, a fate almost worse than death.
Nadia, the dyer's daughter, is unlike anyone else in her isolated village. Every 12 years, every person in Canaan loses their memories completely. Not the quiet teenager. She never forgets. Nadia is the only one who knows that some people use the Forgetting to purposely erase their identities or to commit unsavory acts, the consequences of which they will never have to face. Even the perpetrator won't remember what he/she has done. With the time of Forgetting fast approaching, Nadia is wary. What will happen on this night of danger and chaos? Nadia's hateful older sister has a sinister plan—surely she's not the only one.
When Gray—the handsome glassblower's son—catches Nadia slipping over the wall into the forbidden beyond, he gives her even more reason to worry. Not only are the pair growing closer, but they're discovering some shocking secrets about Canaan. With the Forgetting only days away, Nadia is desperate not to lose Gray. She needs him—not just to confront the Council with what they know, but also to fill the emptiness in her aching heart. How can Nadia make him remember? Can she survive if everything Gray knows about their duty, their friendship, and their love just ... disappears? If a person doesn't live in another's memory, do they even exist at all?
The Forgetting, a new YA novel by Sharon Cameron, explores some fascinating issues about memory, truth, and identity. While the story's set-up is a little confusing at first, the rules of Canaan society soon become evident, allowing the novel's tense, exciting plot to take center stage. The characters are complex, engaging, and empathetic. Nadia and Gray make an appealing couple whose love grows naturally. Their romance offers an engaging subplot, but one that never upstages the real story. All of these elements come together to create a taut, fast-paced tale with surprising twists and turns. It's the unsettling philosophical questions it asks, however, that make The Forgetting so compelling. Who are we now—and who will we become—if we have no memories of who we've been? Without our memories, is life even worth living? And, the most disquieting question of all: What would you do on the night of Forgetting if you knew no one—not even yourself—would remember it come morning? Despite the chilling implications proposed by these questions, The Forgetting is, at its heart, a hopeful tale. A perfect read to start off the new year, I loved this book and recommend it wholeheartedly to anyone who enjoys an engrossing yarn that truly has it all.
(Readalikes: Hm, I can't really think of anything. Can you?)
Grade:
If this were a movie, it would be rated:
for violence, blood/gore, and mild sexual innuendo
To the FTC, with love: I bought a copy of The Forgetting from Amazon with a portion of the millions I make from my lucrative career as a book blogger. Ha ha.
Subscribe to:
Comments
(Atom)

Reading
Everyone in This Bank is a Thief by Benjamin Stevenson
Listening
Remarkably Bright Creatures by Shelby Van Pelt
Followin' with Bloglovin'
-
-
-
NIV Beautiful Word Coloring Bible3 hours ago
-
-
-
-
Last Year by Robert Charles Wilson14 hours ago
-
Pablo Neruda - If You Forget Me18 hours ago
-
Ancillary Justice Readalong ~ Week 221 hours ago
-
Two Tribes21 hours ago
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
Week in Review #461 day ago
-
-
Future Boy by Michael J. Fox2 days ago
-
-
#ThrowbackThursday. October 20154 days ago
-
-
-
-
-
Two short reviews1 week ago
-
November TBR - pending3 weeks ago
-
-
Sorry About the Spam…2 months ago
-
-
No Roundup this month6 months ago
-
Sunday Post #5686 months ago
-
February 2025 Reading Wrap Up8 months ago
-
One Big Happy Family by Susan Mallery8 months ago
-
-
-
-
Girl Plus Books: On Hiatus1 year ago
-
-
-
What Happened to Summer?2 years ago
-
6/25/23 Extra Ezra2 years ago
-
-
-
-
-
Are you looking for Pretty Books?3 years ago
-
-
-
-
-
-
Grab my Button!
Blog Archive
- ► 2021 (159)
- ► 2020 (205)
- ► 2019 (197)
- ► 2018 (223)
- ▼ 2017 (157)
- ► 2016 (157)
- ► 2015 (188)
- ► 2014 (133)
- ► 2013 (183)
- ► 2012 (193)
- ► 2011 (232)
- ► 2010 (257)
- ► 2009 (211)
- ► 2008 (192)
2025 Goodreads Reading Challenge
2024 - Elementary/Middle Grade Nonfiction
2023 - Middle Grade Fiction
2022 - Middle Grade Fiction
2021 - Middle Grade Fiction
2020 - Middle Grade Fiction




