Three of the characters in Breaking Triviality by Sarah Everest are "urban explorers" -- they like to explore abandoned buildings. While some people enter abandoned places because they want to hide a criminal activity, or because they want to deface someone else's property with spray paint or whatever, urban explorers are different. They're usually motivated by curiosity about the past, or by the thrill of seeing places that are rarely entered by others, or simply by the desire to explore.
Marit and Zander's parents encourage their teens to plan adventures. For Marti's 17th birthday, their parents let her plan a trip to the Netherlands to meet a famous urban explorer called Cas so he can show them around some amazing ruins in Rotterdam. Marit and Zander have Dutch heritage, so they are eager to learn more about the land of their forebears. Plus, Marit has had a crush on Cas for a long time, thanks to his YouTube videos.
That's what half of the book is about, because this is a split-time novel. The other half is about a Dutch teen named Annelies who lives in Rotterdam in 1940, right when the Nazis are first occupying the Netherlands. We get to see her living in and visiting buildings that, in the present day, those urban explorers are wandering around as abandoned spaces. Annelies's mother has died, her father is at a loss as to how to deal with the invasion, and her brother is angry about everything, but especially about not being allowed to join the Dutch military. Some Dutch soldiers are quartered in their large home, and Annelies makes friends with one of them, bonding over a dangerous situation he helps her with.
And, at the very end of the book, time travel enters the picture. I quite enjoy time travel stories, so I am excited to see what happens to these teens next, in both eras! Sarah Everest draws realistic teens who are more than halfway to adulthood but still sometimes do heedless or immature things, like all the real teens I know. The urge to show off for someone you have a crush on, the inner conflict between trying to find out if someone likes you and not wanting to know just in case you'll get rejected, the desire to be seen as capable and mature even when you're not sure if you're either one -- those all made these teens feel very real and likeable.
Also, I'm half Dutch, so I really loved all the Dutch words, food, and history woven into the book!
This is the first book in a trilogy of Christian YA novellas, and it releases next week, June 16. I was privileged to be selected to read an advance copy from the publisher, but I was not requested or required to review the book; all opinions are my own.
Particularly Good Bits:
But for some reason -- only understood by every single girl who has ever met their semi-celebrity crush in person and been one hundred percent overwhelmed by how exactly he met every expectation -- I couldn't make my mouth form words. (Marit, chapter one)
A shiver zipped through my body, but it was the good type, like when a song is so entirely right on every level that the hairs on my arms stand on end. (Marit, chapter six)
For the life of me, I had no idea how, in one day's time, I'd gone from being a politely behaved young lady to sneaking out of my house without permission during a war, making friends with the neighborhood witch, aiding an enemy soldier, and flirting with a young man I barely knew. (Annelies, chapter twelve)
Her cool palm reminded me of an old saying of my oma's about how cold hands represent a warm heart. (Annelies, chapter nineteen)
If This was a Movie, I Would Rate It: PG-10 for some scary wartime scenes, light descriptions of a wartime wound, and a tense chase scene.
Now, about that ruin I have explored! It's called the Chapman-Beverley Mill, and it stands beside a highway at the edge of my county here in Virginia. It was a grist mill built in 1742, and it ground grain to make flour for the US Army for every war from the American Revolution on through Desert Storm... and then some villainous villain set fire to it in 1998 and burnt the whole thing down. Except its stone exterior.
The mill site is currently closed to visitors because they are doing some stabilization and restoration to the structure, but we have visited it a couple of times, years ago, when it was open and you could just wander around inside the mill, plus a couple of outbuildings. (How long ago? Well, the two little tykes you see in the above photo are now 14 and 16...)
It's so amazing to see this piece of history in person, even though knowing that it could still be operational and useful breaks my heart.
I don't have lots of photos from this that don't show my kids' faces, but here's one -- I'm stepping in through that doorway where you can see my husband standing in the second photo, and he and two of our kiddos are already inside.
Obviously, we weren't exactly doing "urban exploring" because this place was open for people to check out when we went there, with a parking lot and signs explaining the history of the mill, what different buildings and objects were used for, and so on. But it's the closest I've come.










