Saturday, June 23, 2012

Me and Earl and the Dying Girl


Andrews, Jesse    Me and Earl and the Dying Girl       
Amulet see Abrams, Harry      2012  295p  $16.95      978-1-4197-0176-4           hs          Realistic Fiction      
Greg has sailed through high school by being friendly with everyone, and friends with no one except Earl.  That paradigm is upset when his mother asks him to rekindle his friendship with Rachel, who is dying from leukemia.  With films like “Apocalypse Later (With Supersoakers)” and “The Manchurian Cat-idate (With Cats),” Greg and Earl have reached new heights (or depths) in filmmaking.  No one ever sees the films except Rachel.  Things get out of control when Rachel’s love of the films indirectly forces Greg into making a film for her, and becoming a school hero in the process.  The book is funny, a little raunchy, and filled with craziness, but it broaches a serious subject with style and humor. 

Told in conversations, notations, film scripts and storyboards, this novel has just the right touch to entice boys and reluctant readers.  Greg’s humor and the memorable characters, both flawed and quirky, will keep the reader engaged despite the seriousness of the subject. 

While there is nothing overtly sexual about the story, the frequent use of the “f-word,” references to “boobs” and mild sexual fantasies mean that the book is not appropriate for younger audiences.  This is Jesse Andrews' debut novel. 
VG-BN Pat Naismith      Friendship, Leukemia, Death, Filmmaking

 

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