Reviews for Leap

Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Students at an elite dance school in Bucharest confront their identities and futures. Ana Florean and Carina Scarlat have been secretly dating for three years. In Romania, being out can have dangerous consequences, and Carina doesn’t want to jeopardize her promising ballet career. Ana understands—mostly—and resigns herself to supporting Carina, stepping in as her practice partner in empty studios. But with Carina busy rehearsing, Ana finds herself wondering whether she even likes dancing anymore. She starts spending more time with her new roommate, Sara Dumitrescu, who’s also in the contemporary dance program. As the two become friends, Ana finds someone she can trust with her ambivalent feelings about Carina, and Sara, who thinks she might be gay, too, finds someone who’s willing to visit queer spaces with her. As the girls move through the dynamically illustrated panels, they explore their sexuality and what they want from dance. Most of the work features bold, fluid, black linework against a soft pink background, but many dance sequences include bright bursts of color. While the portrayal of the world of pre-professional ballet is sobering, reflecting the struggles of many dancers who present as queer or have bigger bodies, it also shows glimmers of a better future as the girls rediscover the joy of dancing and explore how gender norms can be bent or broken. An ultimately hopeful portrayal of dance, coming of age, and being true to yourself.(Graphic fiction. 14-18) Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.


School Library Journal
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Gr 8 Up—Two girls studying at a competitive dance school in Bucharest, Romania, navigate crushes, sexuality, and their relationship to dance. Ana, a student in the contemporary dance program, will drop anything to support her girlfriend of three years, classical dancer Carina. Frequently skipping classes to help Carina rehearse, Ana is frustrated that Carina makes her keep their relationship a secret for fear of the potential impact on her career. Ana is also anxious about her increasing burnout and lack of passion for dance, and is worried about what her future will hold if she quits. Sara, Ana's new roommate and a talented contemporary dancer, is grappling with an intense crush on their teacher, Marlena. Her friendship with Ana helps her explore queer spaces in Bucharest and reflect on her sexuality, and the two support one another when their respective relationships with Marlena and Carina complicate their studies. The artwork is drawn in muted pinks, blues, and grays, with an occasional scene in full color, and the characters have a range of skin tones and body types. Popescu highlights the cutthroat and often toxic environment of the dance school, and thoughtfully explores the tension between the characters' personal needs and their desire to be in relationships. VERDICT A sweet, queer coming-of-age story about listening to one's self and navigating the complex world of friendships and romance. Recommended for purchase.—Emily Yates


Book list
From Booklist, Copyright © American Library Association. Used with permission.

Newly paired as roommates at their conservative Romanian dance school, contemporary dancers Ana and Sara quickly become close friends sharing the biggest secrets of their lives: Sara harbors a crush on their instructor Marlena, and Ana has been hiding her relationship with ballerina Carina for years. However, Ana is also dealing with burnout, feeling disillusioned with dancing as well as the way she seems to take a back seat to Carina’s career goals. With Ana’s enrollment and potential career threatened by academic suspension and Sara worried about coming out to family and Marlena, their friendship is severely tested by having only each other to lash out at. The book is an intimate look at the girls’ lives, their struggles, and their attempts to support each other through emotional highs and lows. The art backs this up wonderfully, depicting beautifully expressive faces usually in muted shades of gray and pink with the occasional brilliantly colored splash of dynamic dancing. Overall, a touching portrait of girls coming of age and forging their paths to the future.


Publishers Weekly
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Contemporary dancers Ana Florean and Sara Dumitrescu’s junior year at a Romanian performing arts school turns out to be pivotal and transformative in Popescu’s debut graphic novel. Assigned to share a dorm room, the girls become fast friends. While talented Sara crushes on Marlena, one of her instructors, Ana risks expulsion for frequently skipping classes to be with her girlfriend Carina, an ambitious ballerina who insists on hiding their relationship for fear of derision from her conservative classical ballet cohort. As the school year progresses, Carina’s unwillingness to be open about her relationship with Ana and Sara’s deepening feelings for Marlena threaten to upend the roommates’ professional pursuits and emotional well-being. Sara’s mistaken assumption about Marlena’s feelings for her and Ana’s school suspension prompt the girls to open up to one another about their respective sexualities, cementing their friendship and providing ample support as they each navigate tumultuous situations. Pastel pinks, muted grays, and saturated reds connote the passage of time in this fluidly illustrated work that gracefully captures the ups and downs of first love, ambition, and friendship. Character skin tones are rendered in varying hues that match the palette used. Ages 14–up. (Nov.)

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