Amber (The Literary Phoenix)
Written on Jan 6, 2020
In fact, I have no definitive reason why I decided today would be the day to read it. I was scrolling through my Audible and saw the title and thought, “Sure!”.
It’s was exactly perfect timing.
While I know other people will scream praises of his more recent novels, I’m really glad I started with Full Tilt. I’m afraid if I didn’t, I wouldn’t like it as much as I did. Full Tilt is like a love letter to Ray Bradbury’s Something Wicked This Way Comes crossed with the campy thrills of a Goosebumps novel. Thirteen-year-old me would have loved this book. Thirty-year-old me did as well. It was just the right level of horror to be interesting but not gory, and there were so many elements in the book that kept me on edge. Schusterman did a great job of building a ghost carnival overflowing with imagination. It sucks the reader in… literally, and figuratively.
In the modern world of YA., Full Tilt probably comes off as oversimplified. The characters are impulsive and genuine and emotional. They react rashly, and care about shallow things. And they’re sixteen, so all of this makes perfect sense. The characters in this novel are the most realistic teenagers I’ve read in a while. Adult readers of YA expect unreasonable levels of maturity from their characters, but guess what? I don’t think any of us were perfectly rational, calculated people at that age. I know I wasn’t! Their flaws make them that much more real.
Despite the setting and the length of the book (only xx pages), Schusterman’ not only manages to provide a plot with a ticking clock and great rising and falling actions, fabulous world building, and multilayered characters… he manages to deliver so many small gems of wisdom in each experience. On one hand, these wholesome moments can be cheesy. But it’s also great writing. Full Tilt feels properly like a book written for teens, with a purpose other than entertainment. Schusterman has a clear message of strength and acceptance and self-worth he wants his readers to take away from this experience.
Generally speaking, I liked this book so much. I had no expectations, then I walked into a book about a secret carnival, kidnapped siblings, and a battle for the main character’s soul until sunrise? Any one of those things would have had me picking up this book. For me, Full Tilt is one of those diamond-in-the-rough books that comes out of nowhere and has me wanting to scream about it to the world. It’s horribly underrated in a genre that has become so focused on female protagonists, adult consumers, and sappy romance. Full Tilt is fun, spooky, and delightful. I wholeheartedly recommend you add it to your TBR.