sophia_sol: photo of a 19th century ivory carving of a fat bird (Default)
I'd forgotten how genuinely great this kid's book is. What a delight. What a perfect book to speak to the middle-grade psyche.

This book is about a middle-schooler named Wallace Wallace (yes his first and last names are the same, yes this is in fact incredible) who writes a book review for English class of one of those award-winning depressing kids books about a dog that dies. You know the kind. Wallace thinks this is a bunch of crap and writes a review that says so, and ends up in detention because his english teacher thinks that if he doesn't like the book then he can't be taking it seriously.

And then he ends up accidentally helping out with the production of the middle-school play, which just so happens to be based on the book he wrote the negative review on!

Who are Wallace's real friends, the theatre nerds or the football team he used to be on before he was stuck in detention? Does a play belong to the director or to the actors? Are you allowed to have a different interpretation of a book than your english teacher? Should the dog really die at the end of all the Famous Important Stories About Dogs? All these questions and more will be addressed!

I love it all and honestly it's asking some important questions, all with a funny and irreverent and page-turning tone. And lots of additional background details added in bring the story to life too, and not everything is answered.

My main question at the end of the book is WHAT HAPPENED BETWEEN WALLACE AND STEVE. Prior to the beginning of the book, Wallace and Steve had been best friends and then had a major falling out. That fact is a running through-line in the book, and the very first beginning steps towards a reconciliation happen at the end of the book. What exactly happened between them though, to cause such a major rupture? It seems likely it has something to do with what happened in the previous year's football season, but the reader is not told specifically. Which is fair honestly! But their relationship is clearly important and I am fascinated and want to know more of their story.
sophia_sol: photo of a 19th century ivory carving of a fat bird (Default)
Look, no Gordon Korman book will ever be as brilliant as I Want To Go Home!, and I definitely went into this book with artificially inflated expectations because I haven't read any Korman except I Want To Go Home! for many years. (...actually upon checking my book logs, I haven't read I Want To Go Home! at all since beginning my logs in 2009, I just feel like I must have because of all the fanfic I've read. And I actually read a Macdonald Hall book back in 2011. OH WELL. I Want To Go Home! is still the best.)

Korman is an author of hijinksy humour novels for kids, and he's been writing them (and been published!) since he was a kid himself. This one is about a high school where all the students are astoundingly apathetic about everything. Then a new kid comes to school with, like, ambition and stuff. And he makes a friend, and he and his friend end up getting this other random kid (Mike Otis) elected class president. And somehow, through this, they start to make the rest of the student body invested. (Mike Otis, for the record, finds the whole thing bewildering but mostly just takes the weird goings-on in stride.)

There are some issues with the book (eg female characters don't get much of a role outside romantic interest, and the one character with a Jewish-sounding last name is the character who's strongly associated with being interested in business ventures) but overall it's just kind of mildly fun. I didn't really love it, but I think I would have quite enjoyed it if I'd read it as a teenager myself.

And I find myself curious about the story of Mike Otis, quiet loner who builds his own car and doesn't really know how to talk to people and dresses funny and gives honest answers even when they're clearly not expected (or always listened to). What all else is going on in his life, outside of the manufactured hype around his presidency? The book doesn't let the reader into his viewpoint much and I want to know more.
sophia_sol: photo of a 19th century ivory carving of a fat bird (Default)
Back in the days after I'd started keeping a list of all the books I read each year but BEFORE I started posting reviews of them, I kept desultory personal notes (ranging from a single word to quite a few paragraphs) on some of the books. And I always vaguely forget I have, and forget where exactly to find them, and I'd like to just have them on my dw so they're FINDABLE again for me. And also some of you might find these interesting/amusing? (N.B. some of these contain what I would now classify as INCORRECT OPINIONS.)

SO HERE'S THREE YEARS' WORTH OF BOOKS IN ONE POST, OKAY GO.

expand this cut to see nested cuts listing all the books )

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