Justin will be giving away a fifty dollar gift card to one randomly drawn commenter during the tour, so do leave a comment here. You can also visit the other stops on the tour, seen here (scroll down to see the tour dates, with live links.)
The author has written a very thought-provoking guest post for us here at Fresh Pot of Tea. I hope you enjoy his essay as well as his book.
Social Issues in
Sykosa.
In writing Sykosa, I knew I wanted a story that, for lack of a proper way to
phrase it, peeled itself like an orange. So that its outside appeared rather
ordinary, but upon examination, the reader comes to view the story as being not
what s/he first suspected it of being. A review of Sykosa at Libby’s Book Blog, stated
it better than I currently am:
I start reading Sykosa, and at
first, I just think it's this nice little book about this nice little
Japanese-American girl sitting in class at this nice little school thinking
about painting her fingernails. Seriously - that is how the book starts,”
followed by, “And, then... And, then author Justin Ordonez, starts dropping
subtle hints that something is wrong. Something happened to Sykosa - but, what?
This book really snuck up on me. Because during the time that I was reading it,
I would find myself thinking about it when I was driving or doing other things.
I would be mulling it over, trying to put the pieces together.
During Sykosa, we first get the
overview of Sykosa, her friends, her parochial school, her parents, her
boyfriend Tom, and that they were all involved in a mysterious incident that
happened “last year.” As we progress, we come to see that the construction of
Sykosa’s world is no incident. It’s been derived by sets of values and the
various institutions who propagate those values. In such, the social construct
of Sykosa’s life is a driving factor in the novel’s events.
First and foremost is probably
race.
Sykosa, by Justin Ordonez |
I want to avoid spoilers, so the
general takeaway is that an undercurrent of racism becomes fueled when Niko and
another girl named Donna, leader of the Bitches, being to squabble. It leads to
a tragic event endangering Sykosa’s life and leaves her permanently affected.
During the tragic event, she was saved from danger by a boy named Tom, and he
was physically injured in doing so.
For these part, the
novel discusses the mental aspects driving Sykosa over the societal aspects.
Sykosa was always sort of a moody, introverted personality, which is not the
majority personality for a female, and probably explains why certain women
don’t like Sykosa as a person. (Though, it explains how Sykosa and Niko, a
type-A dominator, have kept such a close friendship). Yet, while Sykosa’s is
not the majority personality type for a woman, hers is not uncommon. Where
Sykosa is most conventionally female is how, for most of her life, she has
experienced bouts of depression. (Women experience depression 50% more
frequently than men, and something like 90% of women experience one long bout
of it in their lives). Sykosa’s poor management of her moods and her anxiety
transforms into Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) following the events of
“last year.” PTSD is characterized by either continually re-imagining the
traumatic event or feeling numb to it and, by extension, the totality of life.
Either way, the traumatic event is predominate in a victim’s thoughts and
actions.
This condition is a
source of frustration and shame for Sykosa. Her community, as well her friends
and family, wants to move past “last year,” yet she cannot let it go, nor can
she stop herself from fearing its second occurrence. In short, she’s lost her
trust in the institutions she thought would protect her, and now she is
uncertain what to feel or think.
Sykosa, Part I: Junior
Year establishes these two concepts in simultaneity, each working in the
background of her life and her decisions. In that way, it’s a very human book.
There’re no superheroes to save these characters from themselves. This is
because, unfortunately, there’re no innocent characters in Sykosa. Everyone is
guilty. That is partially what Libby refers to when she says, “I would be
mulling it over, trying to put the pieces together.” In Part I, the reader sees
how institutional racism, Niko’s ambition, Sykosa’s mental illness, Tom’s
sexism, and the school’s traditional ideology lead to rape, addiction, and
assault, yet the reader cannot fully figure out what happened, “last year,”
since the characters themselves cannot figure it out. None of the ideological
constructs (religious, political or philosophical) are answering the question
of “why.” They only offer a refuge, a place to explain away what happened, a
mechanism for blame, which allows for the superficial sensation of justice.
For anyone who is
interested in these aspects, or you’ve experienced or known someone who
suffered of mental illness, Sykosa will probably be a reading experience that
rings true. Certainly, for a reader interested in a decisive plot developing
alongside the story itself, Sykosa is definitely be a book that meets the
mental puzzle you’re seeking out.
Hey! Justin OrdoƱez
wrote a book called Sykosa. It’s about a sixteen year old girl who’s trying to
reclaim her identity after an act of violence destroys her life and the lives
of her friends. You can find out more about Justin at his blog. You can
also find Sykosa, the novel, on Amazon.
6 comments:
Thank you for your review. Certainly a lot to think about. I like the idea of a 'mental puzzle'.
marypres(AT)gmail(DOT)com
Thank you for hosting Justin today.
It's my pleasure to host such a wonderful author, as well as such a well-written, thoughtful book.
Sounds like a very intense but thought-provoking story.
eai(at)stanfordalumni(dot)org
Thank you for hosting me, and thanks everyone for your comments. Hope everyone chooses to give Sykosa a shot!
If the story is as intense as the review, it would really keep you on the edge of your seat.
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