cover image Heartbreak Symphony

Heartbreak Symphony

Laekan Zea Kemp. Little, Brown, $17.99 (368p) ISBN 978-0-31646-038-5

Kemp (Somewhere Between Bitter and Sweet) delivers a lyrical standalone about pursuing one’s dreams despite impossible odds through Chicane teens Aarón and Mia, virtual strangers bound together by two things: a passion for music, and grief after having each lost a parent. Both seek entrance and a scholarship to the Acadia School of Music, but each finds auditioning insurmountable against their own trauma—six months after Mia’s mother left their family, “an alcoholic chokehold... squeezed the life out of” her father; cancer, meanwhile, has recently caused the death of Aarón’s mother. While Mia navigates self-doubt, and her mother’s legacy of abandonment and domestic abuse, Aarón copes by hallucinating a giant talking robot, the stage persona of his favorite musician, who has long been reported missing. As their San Antonio neighborhood, Monte Vista, crumbles under ICE raids, gentrification, and police brutality, the two navigate their realities not only for the sake of themselves and their futures, but for the culture and soul of their community. An unfocused narrative that details Aarón’s experiences more fully than Mia’s does little to take away from the impact of seeing two teenagers and their loved ones attempt to heal from grief, and descriptions of music are sufficiently vivid to lift melodies right off the page. Ages 14–up. Agent: Andrea Morrison, Writers House. (Apr.)