The Square Root of Summer by Harriet Reuter Hapgood

The Square Root of Summer

by Harriet Reuter Hapgood

My heart is a kaleidoscope, and when we kiss it makes my world unravel . . .

Last summer, Gottie's life fell apart. Her beloved grandfather Grey died and Jason, the boy to whom she lost her heart wouldn't even hold her hand at the funeral. This summer, still reeling from twin heartbreaks, Gottie is lost and alone and burying herself in equations. Until, after five years absence, Thomas comes home: former boy next door. Former best friend. Former everything. And as life turns upside down again she starts to experience strange blips in time - back to last summer, back to what she should have seen then . . .

During one long, hazy summer, Gottie navigates grief, world-stopping kisses and rips in the space-time continuum, as she tries to reconcile her first heartbreak with her last.

The Square Root of Summer is an astounding and moving debut from Harriet Reuter Hapgood.

Reviewed by Kait ✨ on

3 of 5 stars

Share
The Square Root of Summer was a fun and breezy summer read. The word “light” comes to mind, but it isn’t, in fact, a very light book: Gottie is coming to terms with the death of her grandfather Grey, her breakup with her secret boyfriend (the best friend of her older brother), the loss of her best friend who moved away five years previously, and tangentially the death of her mother, who died at Gottie’s birth. That’s a lot for anyone to handle!

Gottie’s a math/physics prodigy, so she comes to terms with all this drama through math and a theory she develops about time travel. The New York Times says,
This is a novel for readers unafraid of science. There’s talk of fractals, wormholes, black holes, the Gödel metric (“a solution to the E=MC² equation that ‘proves’ the past still exists”), Schrödinger’s cat, string theory. Physics provides metaphors for loss, confusion and love. But there’s humor, too, including terrible band names (Gottie’s brother is a glam rocker) worthy of “The Haters”: Fingerband, Synthmoan de Beauvoir, Jurassic Parkas. There are funny German words and delicious baked goods and crazy ­outfits.

It’s not only a book for science geeks though—I am definitively not a math or science person, at least not anymore, and I found the concepts Gottie talks about easy enough to grasp. It adds a bit of flavour to an otherwise fairly stereotypical and trope-y YA read.

Ultimately, if you are looking for something summery and contemporary with a bit of heart, this will fit the bill. Otherwise, it’s not a particularly unique or riveting read.

P.S. Just had to add Harriet’s answer to this question from her website (I love the way she captures the spirit of summer. The Square Root of Summer does this, too):
What is the square root of summer?
Hot skin and cool sea water. Mr Whippy 99s and bare feet on sun-browned grass. Cider and freckles and my cat, flipping over and over in a patch of sun by the window. Jasmine and honeysuckle in the garden, falling in love, reading books in trees and trailing home after dark in days that last twice as long as forever. Friends.

Last modified on

Reading updates

  • Started reading
  • 14 June, 2016: Finished reading
  • 14 June, 2016: Reviewed