Keertana's Reviews > Graffiti Moon
Graffiti Moon
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by
Keertana's review
bookshelves: aussie, favorites, life-changing, rainy-day-re-reads, swoooon, beautiful-prose
Mar 17, 2012
bookshelves: aussie, favorites, life-changing, rainy-day-re-reads, swoooon, beautiful-prose
The only mistake I made in picking up Graffiti Moon was to start it nearly at midnight. I was planning to quickly read a few chapters and go to sleep, but I found myself unable to tear my eyes away from the pages and by the time I was done, it was well past two in the morning. Needless to say, I found myself dreaming about warm cozy beds for much of my day, but Graffiti Moon was totally worth the late night (or should I say early morning?) read.
Graffiti Moon is told in alternating perspectives, shifting from Lucy, Ed, and occasionally Leo's point of view. The story starts out with Lucy pedaling on her bike as fast as she can to see Shadow, a graffiti artist whose work she loves and, who she believes, just may be the guy of her dreams. When Lucy misses Shadow by five minutes, she is forced to meet with her best friends Jazz and Daisy and watch as Jazz decides to hook up with Leo and Daisy with her boyfriend Dylan, leaving Lucy with Ed, the guy whose nose she broke in tenth grade. Just as Lucy is about to regret her all-nighter decision, Ed tells her he knows where to find Shadow. What follows is a late-night adventure and blooming romance, but Ed may not be the guy Lucy thinks he is - he may be more.
I absolutely fell in love with the story of Graffiti Moon. Crowley's writing is flawless and sucks you in so that you feel as if you, not Lucy and Ed, are walking the streets of Australia. The perspective shifts are done with ease and although some scenes are re-told from either Lucy or Ed's POV, the story-telling never becomes cumbersome. One of my favorite things about this book were the poems that were scattered in between Lucy and Ed's thoughts. They were not only beautifully written, but gave a remarkable amount of insight into Leo's mind in a unique and perfectly presented manner.
Still, the thing I loved most about Graffiti Moon was it's love story. Ed and Lucy are both unique characters and their thoughts flowed with such ease and honest simplicity that it felt as if I myself was thinking them opposed to reading them on the page. Furthermore, their love story grew through conversation, a deep appreciation of art, and a special understanding and acceptance of each other. Despite their rocky past, they managed to move on, learning not only from their mistakes, but learning about each other. Surprisingly, theirs was not the only love story in this novel. Jazz and Leo, Daisy and Dylan, Lucy's eccentric parents, Bert and Valerie - I found myself inexplicably in love with all of them and rooting for their romances just as much as I was rooting for Lucy and Ed.
Perhaps the best part of this book is that the romance never took away or overshadowed the serious issues of acceptance, belonging, and family that were prevalent throughout the novel. Graffiti Moon made me laugh, made me scream in frustration, jump for joy, and made me fall completely in love with it. If you chose to read just one contemporary Australian book in your lifetime, let it be this. You'll be utterly sucked in to the story, fall hard for the characters, and I'm sure that you will glean something new with every re-read. It can be said, without a doubt, that Graffiti Moon is one of my favorite novels this year - and perhaps - ever.
You can read this review and more on my blog, Ivy Book Bindings.
Graffiti Moon is told in alternating perspectives, shifting from Lucy, Ed, and occasionally Leo's point of view. The story starts out with Lucy pedaling on her bike as fast as she can to see Shadow, a graffiti artist whose work she loves and, who she believes, just may be the guy of her dreams. When Lucy misses Shadow by five minutes, she is forced to meet with her best friends Jazz and Daisy and watch as Jazz decides to hook up with Leo and Daisy with her boyfriend Dylan, leaving Lucy with Ed, the guy whose nose she broke in tenth grade. Just as Lucy is about to regret her all-nighter decision, Ed tells her he knows where to find Shadow. What follows is a late-night adventure and blooming romance, but Ed may not be the guy Lucy thinks he is - he may be more.
I absolutely fell in love with the story of Graffiti Moon. Crowley's writing is flawless and sucks you in so that you feel as if you, not Lucy and Ed, are walking the streets of Australia. The perspective shifts are done with ease and although some scenes are re-told from either Lucy or Ed's POV, the story-telling never becomes cumbersome. One of my favorite things about this book were the poems that were scattered in between Lucy and Ed's thoughts. They were not only beautifully written, but gave a remarkable amount of insight into Leo's mind in a unique and perfectly presented manner.
Still, the thing I loved most about Graffiti Moon was it's love story. Ed and Lucy are both unique characters and their thoughts flowed with such ease and honest simplicity that it felt as if I myself was thinking them opposed to reading them on the page. Furthermore, their love story grew through conversation, a deep appreciation of art, and a special understanding and acceptance of each other. Despite their rocky past, they managed to move on, learning not only from their mistakes, but learning about each other. Surprisingly, theirs was not the only love story in this novel. Jazz and Leo, Daisy and Dylan, Lucy's eccentric parents, Bert and Valerie - I found myself inexplicably in love with all of them and rooting for their romances just as much as I was rooting for Lucy and Ed.
Perhaps the best part of this book is that the romance never took away or overshadowed the serious issues of acceptance, belonging, and family that were prevalent throughout the novel. Graffiti Moon made me laugh, made me scream in frustration, jump for joy, and made me fall completely in love with it. If you chose to read just one contemporary Australian book in your lifetime, let it be this. You'll be utterly sucked in to the story, fall hard for the characters, and I'm sure that you will glean something new with every re-read. It can be said, without a doubt, that Graffiti Moon is one of my favorite novels this year - and perhaps - ever.
You can read this review and more on my blog, Ivy Book Bindings.
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Quotes Keertana Liked
“I like that about art, that what you see is sometimes more about who you are than what’s on the wall. I look at this painting and think about how everyone has some secret inside, something sleeping like that yellow bird.”
― Graffiti Moon
― Graffiti Moon
“For a while, for as long as you're looking at it, that painting is the world and you get to be in it.”
― Graffiti Moon
― Graffiti Moon
Reading Progress
March 17, 2012
– Shelved
April 13, 2012
–
Started Reading
April 13, 2012
–
Finished Reading
April 14, 2012
– Shelved as:
aussie
April 14, 2012
– Shelved as:
favorites
May 23, 2012
– Shelved as:
life-changing
July 4, 2012
– Shelved as:
rainy-day-re-reads
September 3, 2012
– Shelved as:
swoooon
December 22, 2012
– Shelved as:
beautiful-prose
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by
Eunice
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rated it 5 stars
Apr 20, 2012 07:43AM
Great review, Keertana! Definitely worth the early morning! I stayed up so late reading this too, even though I have early class the next day. lol! So glad you enjoyed this. :))
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Thanks Eunice! Graffiti Moon is definitely one of my favorite books - no regrets staying up that late! ;) I'm really looking forward to reading some of Cath Crowley's other books. I truly loved her writing style, so hopefully I'll be able to find some of her other novels as well! :)
Thanks Sam! :D I've loved all of Cath Crowley's work that I've read so far so I'm looking forward to her new novel, Howling Boy!(:
Great review keertana, how does this book compare with Melina Marchetta's contemporary works? Do you think graffiti moon is better than saving francesca? I'm actually reading this right now and I don't think it's on par with saving francesca yet.
I think Marchetta's contemporary works are a LOT darker than this novel. GRAFFITI MOON packs a punch without containing a lot of the despair and depression that Marchetta's contemporary novels have but I adore them both equally, to be frank. I think they highlight different strengths within the genre.
I love saving francesca keertana, I got disappointed though with the piper's son because it's confusing with all of tom's family members from the finch and mackee side introduced in just a few chapters and it's hard to keep track of who's who.I hope graffiti moon earns 5 stars from me as the story progresses but I'm nearly halfway and I'm not yet blown away.

