Code Name: Verity is one of the best books I've read this year. I expected it to be excellent, since Wein is such a good writer and the author of several other favorite books of mine, but it surpassed my expectations.
The novel is best-read knowing as little as possible about it, since it goes in a number of unexpected but logical directions, so I will confine my description to what you learn within the first 20 or so pages:
The book is in the form of a confession written by a captured British spy during WWII. The spy is a young woman who parachuted into France after her plane crashed. Her best friend, Maddie, was the pilot, and was killed in the crash. The spy is being held prisoner and tortured by the Gestapo; to play out the remaining time she has left, buy herself an easier death, and to memorialize her best friend, she has agreed to give up information in exchange for being allowed to write her confession at book length, and to tell the entire story of how everything came to pass.
I don't think it's spoilery to say that the reliability of the narrator is questionable; that's inherent in the set-up. But how she's unreliable, how she's reliable, and why is both fun to unravel and, like the rest of the story, moving and heartbreaking. This is that rare thing, a story of female friendship as intense as any other sort of love. It's extremely well-written, suspenseful, meticulously researched, and cleverly plotted.
As you can predict if you've read any of Wein's other books, the characters are great and it's extremely, extremely emotionally intense. There are no graphic details, but the psychological depiction of what it feels like to be tortured and helpless - and to hold on to whatever you can of your power and self under circumstances where that feels impossible - is one of the most realistic I've ever read. I would not schedule any important meetings or dates or anything where you need to be emotionally together and focused immediately after finishing this book. It's terrific, not depressing, a book I'm sure I will re-read. But like I said... intense.
Also, female friendship! Girl pilots! Girl spies! Intrigue! War! And even humor and wit, which is certainly needed.
I don't usually make award predictions, but I'm going to throw my hat in the ring for this one: Code Name Verity is going to win the Newbery Medal. You heard it here first.
Code Name Verity


Please do not put spoilers in comments. If enough of you have already read it to make a discussion possible and you'd like to have a spoilery discussion, please say so in comments, and I'll open a separate spoiler post later.
Wein's other books form a sequence which is ideally read in order. However, I'll mark good starting points.
The Winter Prince
. An intense, unconventional Arthurian retelling, also with an unusual narrative structure: a letter from Medraut (Mordred) to his aunt, Morgause. This gives Arthur two legitimate children, a son, Lleu, and a daughter, Goewin. It's mostly about the relationship between Medraut and Lleu, but Goewin is a very interesting character. Especially good depictions of PTSD and healing from trauma.
A Coalition of Lions (Arthurian Sequence, Book 2)
. After the battle of Camlann, Goewin ends up in Aksum (ancient Ethiopia.) Works as a bridge between the first book and the next sequence, but not as strong on its own as the rest of the series.
The Sunbird
. If you don't need to know the details of everything that went down previously, you could start here with the knowledge that Medraut went to Aksum and had a son, Telemakos, with an Aksumite woman. Very good, but warning for child harm: Telemakos is very young and endures some very bad things. (Not sexual abuse.)
The Lion Hunter (The Mark of Solomon)
and The Empty Kingdom (Mark of Solomon Book Two)
. One book in two volumes. Telemakos, now a teenager, is still suffering from the aftereffects of his spy mission in the last book. But, of course, the reward for a difficult job well-done is another difficult job. You could start here, too, if you don't mind not knowing the exact details of what went down. Fantastic, well-written, atmospheric, well-characterized story. Yet another excellent depiction of trauma and healing. Again, extremely intense, but easier to take since he's no longer a child. Try not to get spoiled for anything in this - don't even read the cover copy.
The novel is best-read knowing as little as possible about it, since it goes in a number of unexpected but logical directions, so I will confine my description to what you learn within the first 20 or so pages:
The book is in the form of a confession written by a captured British spy during WWII. The spy is a young woman who parachuted into France after her plane crashed. Her best friend, Maddie, was the pilot, and was killed in the crash. The spy is being held prisoner and tortured by the Gestapo; to play out the remaining time she has left, buy herself an easier death, and to memorialize her best friend, she has agreed to give up information in exchange for being allowed to write her confession at book length, and to tell the entire story of how everything came to pass.
I don't think it's spoilery to say that the reliability of the narrator is questionable; that's inherent in the set-up. But how she's unreliable, how she's reliable, and why is both fun to unravel and, like the rest of the story, moving and heartbreaking. This is that rare thing, a story of female friendship as intense as any other sort of love. It's extremely well-written, suspenseful, meticulously researched, and cleverly plotted.
As you can predict if you've read any of Wein's other books, the characters are great and it's extremely, extremely emotionally intense. There are no graphic details, but the psychological depiction of what it feels like to be tortured and helpless - and to hold on to whatever you can of your power and self under circumstances where that feels impossible - is one of the most realistic I've ever read. I would not schedule any important meetings or dates or anything where you need to be emotionally together and focused immediately after finishing this book. It's terrific, not depressing, a book I'm sure I will re-read. But like I said... intense.
Also, female friendship! Girl pilots! Girl spies! Intrigue! War! And even humor and wit, which is certainly needed.
I don't usually make award predictions, but I'm going to throw my hat in the ring for this one: Code Name Verity is going to win the Newbery Medal. You heard it here first.
Code Name Verity
Please do not put spoilers in comments. If enough of you have already read it to make a discussion possible and you'd like to have a spoilery discussion, please say so in comments, and I'll open a separate spoiler post later.
Wein's other books form a sequence which is ideally read in order. However, I'll mark good starting points.
The Winter Prince
A Coalition of Lions (Arthurian Sequence, Book 2)
The Sunbird
The Lion Hunter (The Mark of Solomon)
From:
no subject
From:
no subject
From:
no subject
(Sorry if you said and I missed it. I skimmed from your first-twenty-pages note on, because I normally don't want to know anything more than that someone-in-particular is recommending it.)
From:
no subject
From:
no subject
From:
no subject
From:
no subject
From:
no subject
---L.
From:
no subject
From:
no subject
From:
no subject
From:
no subject
From:
no subject
From:
no subject
From:
no subject
From:
no subject
Although I sometimes think Medal honors doom a book to not be liked by the age-group it's aimed at (although CNV wasn 't written as a YA, the acquiring editor decided to make it one leader of a new YA imprint in the UK), I firmly believe this will really put ewein on the map of critical recognition - and we already see people who have picked up one of her other books because of CNV and discovered that she is a heck of a writer.
From:
no subject
From:
no subject
If it's really YA rather than middle grade, though, it's more likely a Printz contender, for all that YA isn't technically excluded from the Newbery.
From:
no subject
But it has just been named a Horn Book/Boston Globe Honor Book TODAY at BEA, so that is reason to celebrate!
From:
no subject
But more importantly: totally deserved congratulations!
From:
no subject
http://www.ala.org/yalsa/booklistsawards/bookawards/printzaward/aboutprintz/criteria
and THANK YOU! I am terribly pleased.
From:
no subject
From:
no subject
http://eegatland.livejournal.com/72149.html
The funny thing about the friendship aspect is that I was very calculating when I put it in - the friendship was necessary to the climax, if you see what I mean. But once I started writing it I was like, OMG, HOW WONDERFUL TO WRITE ABOUT HAVING A BEST FRIEND!
From:
no subject
I saw the Printz mentioned a lot on the GoodReads reviews, too. Is it eligible for that? ETA: Ah, I see you already answered that.
Well then!
From:
no subject
I think people heard about CNV here first, from you, a couple of years ago.
From:
First mention of CNV in a thread on Rachelmanija's LJ
From:
no subject
From:
no subject
From:
no subject
*I* expect to get pleasure out of your reading John Boyd, if that counts.
From:
no subject
Thanks for the rec! I enjoyed Jemisin's 100K Kingdoms, but the new ones look even better/more to my taste.
From:
no subject
Did you ever read the sequels to 100K Kingdoms?
From:
no subject
From:
no subject
From:
no subject
From:
no subject
From:
no subject
From:
no subject
From:
no subject
There is spoiler friendly CNV discussion group here, if anyone's interested, though I suspect starting a CNV spoiler-thread on Rachel's blog would generate some great discussion too:
http://www.goodreads.com/group/show/70433-code-name-verity-spoiler-friendly-zone
From:
no subject
Thanks for the info on Wein's other books - apparently I have been missing out!
From:
no subject
From:
no subject
From:
no subject