Wednesday, October 15, 2008

The astonishing Adventures of Fanboy and Goth Girl by Barry Lyga

Fanboy is a skinny, nerdy kid who gets beaten up on a regular basis at school by the popular jocks while members of the opposite sex don't even realize he exists (something he wishes the jocks would catch on to). He carries a bullet around in his pocket, something akin to a safety blanket, and keeps a certain 'List' of people in the back of his mind. You think you know where this is all headed - it is set in America, after all - especially when he meets the similarly bitter and angry Goth Girl, who has a disturbing interest in his step-father's gun collection. But that's where The Adventures of Fanboy and Goth Girl takes a sharp U-turn, avoiding the easy and well-trodden way out - blazing guns and school hallways littered with dead kids. Fanboy isn't just a nerd. He's smart. He's talented. In between being humiliated at gym class and getting his face slammed into school lockers, Fanboy's is pouring his heart and soul into writing a graphic novel, one he hopes to get published, and one he hopes will be a way out his miserable life and the key to his fame and fortune. Lyga's odd hero gives an interesting voice to the thousands of faceless kids that file through schools around the world each year who manage to live in the face of intense harrasment and bullying, without thought of retaliation - other than showing their classmates up at the school reunion. The ending may be a little optimistic for some, but stranger things have happened... (You find out what his real name is once but I can't seem to find the page again - it's something like Cecil - no wonder he prefers Fanboy.)
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The earth, my butt and other big round things by Carolyn Mackler

Uncle Montague's Tales of Terror by Chris Priestley

I don't know why I chose to read this book. The cover looks spooky, the title has 'terror' in it and I've never managed to watch I know what you did last summer the whole way through, despite people telling me it really isn't that scary. In other words, I'm a big chicken! In the end, I'm glad I summoned the courage to read it. It's a collection of ten short and grisly tales, told by the eccentric Uncle Montague to his inquisitive nephew Edgar. Uncle Montague's Tales of Terror are stories inspired by various artefacts Edgar notices in the shadows of his uncle's strangely dark house - a gold watch, a gilt frame, a church pew gargoyle. Each story has a chilling end - but Edgar dismisses them as fiction, although his uncle would have him believe otherwise. Witches, ghosts, demons and jinns wreak havoc on the characters - all children - in each story all told in a disturbingly familiar way, as if Uncle Montague was himself the child, which is why Edgar is almost certain they are just stories... well, almost certain... Reading it reminded me of a pyjama party where everyone sits in a circle with torches lighting up and distorting their faces, telling scary stories, until someone freaks out and the lights have to go on and an adult has to come in and calm everyone down.
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