Ratings4
Average rating4.3
good book for middle schoolers. really enjoyable
Reviews with the most likes.
Do you ever wonder what it's like to be so angry that you... and then something happens, and after that, everyone figures that's what you're like, and that's what you're always going to be, and so you just decide to be it? But the whole time you're thinking, “Am I going to be like him? Or am I already like him?”
About how people are quick to judge other people based on their family's reputation. The message is that everything will be okay despite the bad things in life. That's nice, but I'm not a fan of quick character developments for the sake of rainbows and sunshines.
GARY D. SCHMIDT
One of the best YA books I've read so far this year. Schmidt has crafted a hilarious, genuine, and touching story that had me laughing and crying in turn throughout the novel. Okay For Now is the story of 14 year-old Doug Swieteck, whose sorry excuse for a father moves the family from the city to small-town Marysville, New York. There, Doug meets Lil Spicer, smart daughter of the town grocer, and must deal with prejudice at school thanks to his older brother's hoodlum reputation. Then his oldest brother, Lucas, returns home from Vietnam in a wheelchair, and the family must learn to adjust. Schmidt weaves James Audubon's famous bird paintings, Broadway shows, Jane Eyre, Yankees baseball players, the Apollo 11 moon landing, the Vietnam war, horseshoes, and other seemingly-disparate elements into a seamless narrative that, coupled with Doug's distinct, believable voice, makes it a must-read. I'm not lying.
MORE CRYING FOREVER, JFC
I wasn't sure what it meant that this was in the same “world” as The Wednesday Wars, since it's not like the Wednesday Wars was sci-fi or anything, but the protagonist of this was a minor character in the Wednesday Wars whose family moved to another town, so there aren't any other overlaps with The Wednesday Wars. Just FYI.
Anyway this book had about a million plot elements that would have been horrible cliches in the hands of a lesser author (abusive father, wise old librarian who teaches Doug about art, wise old rich man who teaches Doug to play horseshoes, grumpy rich lady who turns out to have a heart of gold, traumatized Vietnam vet older brother, ETC) but they're in the hands of a great author and they will just make you cry for sadness and then for the beauty of the human existence and then maybe for sadness a little bit more. Also it's funny? Anyway you should read it.