Same Difference by Siobhan Vivian

Same Difference

by Siobhan Vivian

Does a change always do you good?

The last thing Emily wants is another summer of tanning and pool hopping in Cherry Grove. Now that her best friend has a boyfriend, everything feels different in a way she doesn't quite understand. So when offered a spot at a prestigious art program in Philadelphia, Emily jumps at the chance to leave her hometown for a few hours a day.

But it takes more than a change of scenery and a new group of friends to discover yourself. As Emily bounces between a suburb where everyone tries to fit in and a city where everyone wants to be unique, she struggles to find her own identity. And while the rules may change, the pressures remain the same.

Friendships can be hard to navigate. Boys can be both mysterious and predictable. And the line between right and wrong can be a little blurry…

Reviewed by Joséphine on

4 of 5 stars

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Emily was new to art. She had only recently discovered her interest in it and hoped that she would be able to learn more at a summer art programme. Little did she know she would find students with years of experience. Of course she started questioning if she made the right choice to pursue art alongside all these people who basically lived and breathed art. It was precisely this whole struggle that sucked me right into the story. Well, that and Shadow Girl. Shadow Girl was a course mate who inspired Emily and made her question what art is all about. Reading about all their little projects allowed my imagination to run wild as I tried to picture what they looked like.

Besides following Emily into Philadelphia, readers also stay right at home with her in Cherry Grove. There I met Meg, her best friend, and Rick too, Meg's boyfriend. Emily had felt like the third wheel with them for a long time and was glad that she was finally making new friends, who like her, enjoyed art. Meg and Rick had little understanding for art, so over the summer cracks began to appear in their friendship. Even though Emily did become somewhat self-absorbed, Meg's personality was still captured well, so readers won't be left reading about two-dimensional characters in the least.

While Emily started out as a cookie cutter teen from Cherry Grove, she came to develop herself as her very own person over the summer. Art does that to people, I believe, when one allows themselves to get lost in art and lets art leave impressions on the soul. Vivian captured the whole process beautifully in Emily. Anyone who enjoys novels involving art is bound to enjoy Same Difference. I know I did.

This review is also available on dudettereads.com.

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Reading updates

  • Started reading
  • 2 October, 2013: Finished reading
  • 2 October, 2013: Reviewed