A review by mallorypen
All the Right Notes by Dominic Lim

emotional hopeful lighthearted sad slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

3.75

I liked this book! I found it to be a quiet coming of age story, with a sweet second chance with a childhood love, mixed in with a soft storyline about the importance of family and acceptance.

All of the main characters - Kito, Mr. C, Emmett, Ojima - had strong character voices. I felt like I got a really solid sense of who they were, without leaning too heavily on stereotyping to get the reader there. That’s not to say there weren’t tropes, but I thought they were used with sensitivity. The longing Kito feels throughout his life - for music, for acceptance, for Emmett, for a purpose for his gifts - was a consistent theme throughout the story, and the music of music as a metaphor wasn’t overdone.

There were a few things that brought my overall rating down. The pace of the story was overall rather slow - it allowed for a really beautiful slow burn between Emmett and Kito, but sometimes I just wanted the story to pick up. I also felt that there wasn’t anything surprising about the story, and part of that was in the author’s (sometimes heavy handed) use of foreshadowing. Obviously the relationship with Mark wasn’t going to work and he was set up with the perfect person to cheat with; obviously Emmett was in love with Kito since high school. Obviously Kito was going to find his voice and purpose by following his father’s footsteps into the main thing that tied his family together, and the writing was on the wall that Emmett and Kito would end up together. I wasn’t expecting the assumed assault, but it ended up being something of a non-issue when the story was all told. For all the beauty of the slow burn, there just wasn’t much tension throughout the plot. And lastly, there were a few moments where the sentimentality got a little thick for me.

The reader did a GREAT job - accents, singing, near-tears delivery and all!

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