A Semi-Definitive List of Worst Nightmares
A Semi-Definitive List of Worst Nightmares book cover

A Semi-Definitive List of Worst Nightmares

Hardcover – September 5, 2017

Price
$11.95
Format
Hardcover
Pages
368
Publisher
G.P. Putnam's Sons Books for Young Readers
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0399546594
Dimensions
5.94 x 1.19 x 8.56 inches
Weight
1.1 pounds

Description

From School Library Journal Gr 9 Up—Esther's family is cursed; according to her grandfather, everyone Esther loves is doomed to be killed by the thing of which they are most afraid. Her twin Eugene is terrified of the dark, her mother is a superstitious compulsive gambler, and her father is agoraphobic and hasn't left the basement in six years. Esther's fears are elucidated in her "Semi-Definitive List of Worst Nightmares." After reconnecting with her elementary school valentine Jonah, her list is stolen by said valentine, and the recovery of the list leads to a relationship between the two. As Esther comes to trust Jonah, they work together to overcome her fears, one by one, by facing them directly. Lobsters, graveyards, and heights are a few of the anxieties they tackle together, with Jonah filming the process and, unbeknownst to her posting it to YouTube. Esther, Jonah, and her family are complex and lovable characters fighting their individual demons. Woven throughout is a subplot concerning death incarnate that somehow manages to lighten the tone of the novel. VERDICT Rainbow Rowell devotees, John Green junkies, and fans of This Song Will Save Your Life by Leila Sales will find a lot to love here.—Deidre Winterhalter, Oak Park Public Library, IL Praise for A Semi-Definitive List of Worst Nightmares : An Amazon Editor's Favorite YA Book for Fall 2017 An Amazon September Best of the Month Pick —xa0YA/Teens A Hello Giggles Best of September Pick A Bustle Best of September YA PickA 2017 B&N Best Young Adult Book “ [A] bewitching book . . . Sutherland's fertile imagination makes this book a deep dive into the intricacies of family, friends, and personal history. . . . A fresh and compelling look at mental illness.”— Kirkus Reviews “[A] darkly ironic tale about an offbeat dysfunctional family.”— Publishers Weekly “ Rainbow Rowell devotees, John Green junkies , and fans of This Song Will Save Your Life by Leila Sales will find a lot to love here .”— School Library Journal “ [I]mmediately hooks readers . . . Libraries should purchase this for readers looking for something quite out of the ordinary.”— VOYA “ Dark, magical, and humorous , this is a quirky and cohesive novel about fear, depression, and obsession with death.”— Booklist “[A] magical take on mental illness that feels very real.”— Bustle Praise for Our Chemical Hearts : Indies Introduce Summer 2016 Pick Autumn 2016 Kids' Indie Next List – "Inspired Recommendations for Kids from Indie Booksellers" “ The most romantic read of the season is an arguably anti-YA story… It’s the complex chemistry between Henry and Grace that touches the heart and doesn’t let go .”— USA Today “The author pulls no punches… emotionally engaging .”— Kirkus Reviews “Eloquently conveying the complexity of love and grief, debut novelist Sutherland creates a story filled with intriguing and memorable characters .”— Publishers Weekly “This much-buzzed-about debut captures the messy, awkward, all-consuming emotions of a teen’s first love.”— Entertainment Weekly , Fall Books Preview“ Emotionally complex, funny , filled with well-realized and diverse characters and realistic motivations, Sutherland’s debut will stick with readers .”— Booklist “This magnificent debut from 26-year-old Australian author Krystal Sutherland tracks the unlikely romance of Henry Page and Grace Town, two very different teens chosen to edit their high school paper together…You could probably learn a thing or two from [Henry’s] and Grace’s emotional odyssey .”— Teen Vogue , “October’s Best New YA Books”xa0“This book delves far deeper than the typical high school romance, and its savvy wordplay and Henry’s self-deprecating charm will win over fans of Stephen Chbosky’s The Perks of Being a Wallflower and John Green’s The Fault in Our Stars .”— School Library Journal “Henry is surrounded by well-drawn friends and family, and Grace is a fascinating cipher, in a book that’s anything but a predictable romance .”— B&N Teen , “Most Anticipated October YA Books”“I'm sorry to have to do this to you, but the love story of Henry and Grace is going to kick you in the emotional gut .”— Bustle , “Best New YA Novels Coming in October”“Perhaps one of the most entertaining features of the novel is the irreverent and funny teen banter that masks their deeper feelings. Best of all, though, is the engaging story that unfolds at just the right pace, drawing the reader in as the stakes get higher and decisions must be made.”— VOYA “Henry’s first language is clever, angst-driven wit, and this pair is as sharp and quippy as John Green’s Hazel and Gus … Fans of romance driven by stylized narration are the audience for this.”— BCCB Krystal Sutherland was born and raised in Townsville, Australia—an inhospitable land where crocodiles, snakes, and jellyfish are always on the prowl. She grew up living directly across the road from the local library and spent almost every day after school (and weekends, too) having adventures between the pages of books (mainly because it was too dangerous to go outside). She moved to Sydney for college (and safety), where she cut her writing teeth as the editor of the student magazine at the University of New South Wales. She kept gathering tales as an exchange student in Hong Kong and as a foreign correspondent in Amsterdam. Her first book, Our Chemical Hearts , was released in 2016, and was published in over twenty countries. Her three greatest fears are heights, dark cavesxa0.xa0.xa0. and (perhaps worst of all) frogs. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. 1 The Boy at the Bus Stop ESTHER SOLAR had been waiting outside Lilac Hill Nursing and Rehabilitation Center for half an hour when she received word that the curse had struck again. Rosemary Solar, her mother, explained over the phone that she would no longer, under any circumstances, be able to pick her daughter up. A cat black as night with demon-yellow slits for eyes had been found sitting atop the hood of the family car—an omen dark enough to prevent her from driving. Esther was unfazed. The spontaneous development of phobias was not a new phenomenon in the Solar family, and so she made her way to the bus stop four blocks from Lilac Hill, her red cape billowing in the evening breeze and drawing a few stares from strangers along the way. xa0 On the walk, she thought about who normal people would call in a situation such as this. Her father was still interred in the basement he’d confined himself to six years ago, Eugene was AWOL (Esther suspected he’d slipped through another gap in reality—it happened to Eugene from time to time), and her grandfather no longer possessed the fine motor skills required to operate a vehicle (not to mention that he couldn’t remember that she was his granddaughter). Basically, Esther had very few people who could bail her out of a crisis. The bus stop was empty for a Friday night. Only one other person sat there, a tall black guy dressed like a character from a Wes Anderson movie, complete with lime-green corduroy pants, a suede jacket, and a beret pulled down over his hair. The boy was sobbing quietly, so Esther did what you’re supposed to do when a complete stranger is showing too much emotion in your presence—she ignored him completely. She sat next to him and took out her tattered copy of The Godfather and tried very hard to concentrate on reading it. The lights above them hummed like a wasp’s nest, flickering on and off. If Esther had kept her eyes down, the next year of her life would’ve turned out quite differently, but she was a Solar, and Solars had a bad habit of sticking their noses where they didn’t belong. The boy sobbed dramatically. Esther looked up. A bruise was blooming across his cheekbone, plum-dark in the fluorescent light, and blood trickled from a split at his eyebrow. His patterned button up—clearly donated to a thrift store sometime in the mid- 1970s—was torn at the collar. The boy sobbed again, then peeked sideways at her. Esther generally avoided talking to people if it wasn’t completely necessary; she sometimes avoided people even when it was completely necessary. “Hey,” she said finally. “You okay?” “Think I got mugged,” he said. “You think ?” “Can’t remember.” He pointed to the wound at his forehead. “Took my phone and wallet though, so think I got mugged.” And that’s when she recognized him. “Jonah? Jonah Smallwood?” The years had changed him, but he still had the same wide eyes, the same strong jaw, the same intense stare he had even when he was a kid. He had more hair now: a shadow of stubble and a full head of thick black hair that sat up in a kind of pompadour style. Esther thought he resembled Finn from The Force Awakens , which was, as far as she was concerned, a very good way to look. He glanced at her, at the Jackson Pollock painting of dark freckles smattered across her face and chest and arms, at the mane of peach red hair that fell past her hips. Trying to place her. “How do you know my name?” “You don’t remember me?” They’d only been friends for a year, and they’d only been eight at the time, but still. Esther felt a twinge of sadness that he’d apparently forgotten about her—she had certainly not forgotten about him. “We went to elementary school together,” Esther explained. “I was in Mrs. Price’s class with you. You asked me to be your valentine.” Jonah had bought her a bag of Sweethearts and crafted a handmade card, on which was a drawing of two fruits and a line that read: We make the perfect pear. Inside, he had asked her to meet him at recess. Esther had waited. Jonah hadn’t showed. In fact, she’d never seen him again. Until now. “Oh yeah,” Jonah said slowly, recognition finally dawning on his face. “I liked you because you protested Dumbledore’s death outside the bookstore like a week after the movie came out.” How Esther remembered it: little Esther, seven years old with a bright red bowl cut, picketing the local bookstore with a sign that read, SAVE THE WIZARDS. And then a snippet from the six o’clock news, a reporter kneeling next to her, asking her the question: “You do realize the book was published years ago and the ending can’t be changed?” and her blinking dumbly into the camera. Back to reality: “I hate that there’s video evidence of that.” Jonah nodded at her outfit, at the bloodred cape held at her throat by a ribbon and the wicker basket resting at her feet. “Looks like you’re still strange. Why are you dressed like Red Riding Hood?” Esther hadn’t had to answer questions about her predisposition for costumes for several years. Strangers on the street always assumed she was on her way to or from a costume party. Her teachers—much to their vexation—could find no fault with her outfits as far as the school’s dress code was concerned, and her classmates were used to her coming in dressed as Alice in Wonderland or Bellatrix Lestrange or whatever, and didn’t really care what she wore so long as she kept smuggling them cake. (More on this in a moment.) “I was visiting a grandparent. It seemed appropriate,” she said in reply, which appeared to satisfy Jonah, because he nodded like he understood. “Look, you got any cash on you?” Esther did have cash on her, in her Little Red Riding Hood picnic basket. She had $55, all of it earmarked for her Get the Hell Out of This Podunk Town fund, which now stood at $2,235 in total. xa0 Back to the previously mentioned cake. You see, in Esther’s junior year, East River High had instituted sweeping changes in the cafeteria until only healthy food was available. Gone were the pizzas and chicken nuggets and tots and fries and sloppy joes and nachos that made high school semibearable. The words “Michelle Obama” were now muttered in exasperation every time a new item was added to the menu, like leek and cauliflower soup or steamed broccoli pie. Esther had seen a budding business opportunity and made a box mix of double chocolate fudge brownies. She brought them into school the next day, where she sold each one for five dollars and made a cool profit of fifty bucks. Since then, she’d become the Walter White of junk food; such was the extent of her empire that her customers at school had dubbed her “Cakenberg.” She’d recently expanded her territory to Lilac Hill Nursing and Rehabilitation Center, where the most exciting things on the menu were overcooked hot dog and bland mashed potato. Business was booming. “ Why? ” she said slowly. “I need money for a bus fare. You give me cash, and I can use your phone to transfer funds from my bank account directly into yours.” It sounded slippery as all hell, but Jonah was bruised and bleeding and crying, and she still halfway saw him as the sweet young boy who’d once liked her enough to draw her a picture of two pears. So Esther said: “How much do you need?” “How much you got? I’ll take it all and transfer you that.” “I have fifty-five dollars.” “I’ll take fifty-five dollars.” Jonah stood up and came to sit next to her. He was much taller than she thought, and thinner too, like a stalk of corn. She watched as he opened the banking app on her phone, logged in, filled in her account details as she gave them to him, and authorized the transfer. Funds transfer successful, the app read. So she leaned down and opened her basket and gave him the fifty-five dollars she’d made at Lilac Hill today. “Thank you,” Jonah said as he shook her hand. “You’re all right, Esther.” Then he stood, and winked, and was gone. Again. And that’s how, on a warm, damp evening at the end of summer, Jonah Smallwood swindled her out of fifty-five dollars and pickpocketed, in the space of approximately four minutes: -her grandmother’s bracelet, right off her wrist -her iPhone -a Fruit Roll-Up from her basket that she’d been saving for the ride home -her library card (which he later used to rack up $19.99 in replacement fees for defacing a copy of Romeo and Juliet with lobster graffiti) -her copy of The Godfather -her semi-definitive list of worst nightmares -and her dignity Esther kept replaying the cringeworthy memory of her Dumbledore protest in her head, and didn’t realize she’d been robbed until her bus arrived six minutes and nineteen seconds later, at which point she exclaimed to the driver, “I’ve been robbed!” To which the driver said, “No riffraff!” and closed the doors in her face. (Perhaps Jonah didn’t steal all of her dignity—the bus driver took what shreds he hadn’t managed to scrape away from her bones.) So you see, the story of how Esther Solar was robbed by Jonah Smallwood is quite straightforward. The story of how she came to love Jonah Smallwood is a little bit more complicated. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • From the author of
  • Our Chemical Hearts
  • comes the hilarious, reality-bending tale of two outsiders facing their greatest fears about life and love—one debilitating phobia at a time.
  • Ever since Esther Solar’s grandfather was cursed by Death, everyone in her family has been doomed to suffer one great fear in their lifetime. Esther’s father is agoraphobic and hasn’t left the basement in six years, her twin brother can’t be in the dark without a light on, and her mother is terrified of bad luck.   The Solars are consumed by their fears and, according to the legend of the curse, destined to die from them.   Esther doesn’t know what her great fear is yet (nor does she want to), a feat achieved by avoiding pretty much everything. Elevators, small spaces and crowds are all off-limits. So are haircuts, spiders, dolls, mirrors and three dozen other phobias she keeps a record of in her semi-definitive list of worst nightmares.   Then Esther is pickpocketed by Jonah Smallwood, an old elementary school classmate. Along with her phone, money and a fruit roll-up she’d been saving, Jonah also steals her list of fears. Despite the theft, Esther and Jonah become friends, and he sets a challenge for them: in an effort to break the curse that has crippled her family, they will meet every Sunday of senior year to work their way through the list, facing one terrifying fear at a time, including one that Esther hadn’t counted on: love.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(96)
★★★★
25%
(80)
★★★
15%
(48)
★★
7%
(22)
23%
(73)

Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

Great book, great representation of phobias

One thing I love about this book is that it talks about phobias in the way they should be talked about-- as something that can be overcome. In fact, from my neuroscience background I know that anxiety, and especially phobias, are the easiest of any mental illnesses to treat. Also, treatment is done the same way Ester does it in the book-- exposure. 

(Although, granted, for some phobias rather than just fears, one might need more of a lead-up to exposure in order to prevent panic attacks and the like, as it happens in one instance where Ester becomes physically ill from panic and this reinforces/should have reinforced her fear). 

Normally, I do not like magical realism. I like magic and I like contemporary literature but when the lines between them are blurry I struggle with it. Having said that, this was the most successful use of the two that I have yet read (although the classification of this book is less cut-and-dry-- I'm not sure if its magical realism or what, but for once I don't mind). In part, it helps mirror the Solar family's feelings of inability to distinguish between fact and fiction, or dangerous and anxiety-producing.

The writing is funny and captivating. The concept is original but captures important (and accurate) information about mental illnesses, including the common abstraction of them as something supernatural or above human control. In this way, while the content is hard to read about, the way in which it is approached is both factually accurate and, in many ways, emotionally accurate. 

Jonah's affection for Ester was refreshing in that it was based on friendship first, but also aspects deeper than appearance-- ie respect, admiration, humor, etc. 

I did have some issues with the way the parents handled the kids mental illnesses, with how the ability to make the fear worse through exposure wasn't explored, how Ester was forced to be the head of the household (especially at the end just because her mental illness was more under control/overcome and/or because she was caring enough to give her mom money for things like appliances), and how Jonah's stealing was glorified (even if, to some degree, justified by his situation).  

I keep going back and forth on Ester's ending, too. I think, however, it fits well and I like it as a whole. Perhaps I would have liked for her to have some passion or goal in addition to what she got, but this feels fitting. 

All in all, though, I thought this was a really great book. Well written. Good coverage of mental illness, especially phobia and exposure. A love plot that felt realistic and genuine. Family ties that were honest but close. Sympathy for those struggling with mental illness while still offering agency towards treatment. If you like magical realism or books that have magical elements, definitely check this book out. 
1 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Do NOT judge this book by its sparse, quirky cover. Its a GREAT read!

Esther and her family have been under a curse to suffer from one great fear in their lifetime ever since her grandfather met Death in the war. Now this family is quirky. The father, for instance is agoraphobic and will not leave their basement. Esther's brother, Eugene, is afraid of the dark and turns on candles and lamps and strings of lights when the sun goes down.

The curse hasn't hit Esther yet, and when she has a hapless reunion with a former crush, he discovers her list and challenges her to face her fears. Together they tick off the nightmares, and of course, the surprises along the way.

Trigger warnings in this book include anxiety and suicide. However, the bigger picture at the end of the book is positively stunning. I did not at all imagine that a book that looked like this would sweep me off my feet and almost move me to tears. I also have to say that I would really put this book into a category closer to magical realism. Its not quite fantastical and it itsn't wholly rooted in the real world....just a little touch of fantasy/magic. So that's my opinion.
✓ Verified Purchase

This was such a beautiful book!

A SEMI-DEFINITIVE LIST OF WORST NIGHTMARES wasn't what I was expecting, and then it was, and then it wasn't -- all in a good way. I thought this would be heavy on the magical realism based on the synopsis and then it turned more realistic fiction for a while, and came back as a blend of both. There was a lot of care taken when writing this book and it really shows through each of the characters and their own personal situations. I was really impressed with it!

The characters of this book were so wonderful and real and had such amazing personalities. Every single one has their own thing they're dealing with and Esther blames this on the family curse, but there's a lot more beneath the surface than she understands and more importantly, is willing to face. It was interesting to see both sides of that concept -- from the magical realism/curse side and from the realistic side that really tackled mental health head on. It was addressed so well and I felt like it was a very realistic representation. The magic is both real and also a coping mechanism/avoidance method and I really enjoyed the blend between the real and the imaginary. The reader is left wondering how much is really magic and that's something I love about magical realism when it's done well!

This is also one of those realistic fiction novels that's great for those who aren't normally contemporary romance readers. The family is quirky and fun to read, the plot of the book involves a lot of fun instances where characters face their fears (some of them silly), and there are some really great representations of mental health on many levels. I liked that there was an actual plot with an end goal of conquering fears and the way they tackled each one was fun and also beautiful. 

The characters really brought this book to life, every single one unique and beautiful. I loved getting to know this family and the people who supported them. I laughed, I cried, I was afraid, and I was happy. This book took me through so many emotions and I'm so glad I read it!
✓ Verified Purchase

Perfect for readers who loved THE ACCIDENT SEASON

Loved this book! It was such a unique idea--a cursed family, Death being a real person and the grandfather's BFF--that was well executed with wonderful, descriptive writing. Would highly recommend to readers who loved THE ACCIDENT SEASON or other contemporary stories with a magical twist.
✓ Verified Purchase

Be prepared for the content before reading

I was disappointed in this book and I believe it’s because I had a very different idea about what it was about. I expected a quirky love story, which it started out as, but it moved into mental health issues, serial killers, and death. The mental health was the main focus within the story and the book did a pretty good job of portraying that.
Looking for the romance and fun I was disappointed partway though and by the end I wished I’d simply stopped reading.
The writing style is pretty enjoyable but please, be aware of the theme of the book so you aren’t disappointed. This isn’t a lightheaded romance in the park.
✓ Verified Purchase

Truly unique and beautiful read - LOVED IT!

I loved this book in so many ways and it took me by absolute surprise. I've never read a book quite like this before, and it was almost as if I was selected to read this one and especially meant to read it because of some issues that connected with me on a personal level. I knew nothing about it beforehand, which sometimes is the best way to go into a book, and ended up absolutely loving it. It made me laugh, it made me cry. It made me want to write down lines as quotes. It made me think of someone in my past that I've lost and I have grieved over for years. The cover alone has a cat on it (I know, I know, don't judge a book by its cover).

There are some HUGE issues running through the core of this beautiful, original book about a young girl called Esther being encouraged to face her fears by an amazing young man called Jonah (yes, how lucky is she?), so be forewarned: along with all the fears and phobias that are brought up, there are major issues of abuse, depression, suicidal ideation, self-harm, mental-illness (all that can encourage conversation, and I'm really glad the author Krystal put an afterword about some of this in the back of the book). There are big triggers in the book.
That said, I feel as though the story is a beautiful testament to how a dysfunctional family like this and facing fears like Esther does (as well as looking Death in the face) is really what was needed to do to turn their lives around. It's not all doom and gloom; this story is about looking fear in the face and telling Death 'it's not my time yet'.
I don't always enjoy books with overly 'quirky' characters but these ones all felt so genuine in their quirkiness: Esther with her different outfits, her mom Rosemary and her hippie-like existence, her agoraphobic father...they all are. Even Fleyonce the kitty (who at first I was very upset about, but that's another essay). The Man that Would be Death caps that list off. And then there's Esther falling in love with someone she's known since grade school, who goes through this list with her, honestly and earnestly.

There are so many amazing, unique elements about this wonderful story; I won't forget it any time soon. Every time I had to stop reading, I couldn't wait to continue. My biggest complaint is that I only have a digital copy. I most certainly need to own this amazing book.
✓ Verified Purchase

A great mix of serious and really quirky.

This book is a great mix of serious and really quirky. I liked how the story started off feeling very placeless and enchanting, but slowly goes deeper while the picture sharpens. A lot of serious topics are handled, including mental illness, all with a dose of weirdness that makes the tale feel not so heavy. I really loved following Esther on her adventures as she tried to conquer her fears, and though didn't like him at first, I adored Jonah Smallwood so much by the end. I am a huge fan of sibling bonds, especially twins and Esther and Eugene's relationship is one of my favorite parts of this book. My only complaint is the end was way too abrupt and one aspect of it threw me off. I definitely recommend this book!

Love Triangle Factor: None
Cliffhanger Scale: Standalone