Friday, September 3, 2010

Review: The DUFF by Kody Keplinger

Tags: young adult, sex, friendship

Summary

When the world’s greatest womanizing jerk, Wesley Rush, calls cynical Bianca Piper the Duff (designated ugly fat friend), the term haunts her day and night. Next to her gorgeous best friends, she is a nobody. Add to that her parents’ crumbling marriage, and Bianca desperately needs something to distract her.

So she kisses Wesley. And then they continue hooking up.

Bianca wants to keep this a strictly noncommittal physical thing, but nothing prepares her for what happens next: the emotional connection she never in a million years wanted to make with Wesley.

Review

Enter The Book for the new generation of teens: Kody Keplinger’s strikingly smart debut THE DUFF. Conservative and prudish adults will most definitely try to ban this book, but teenagers will snatch this sexy and edgy debut right up for its relatable, modern protagonist and spot-on dialogue.

Fans of “traditional,” brushed-up YA literature beware: you are not going to like Bianca. She is loud, angry, spiteful, cynical…and as a result, she will be welcomed with loving arms by today’s teenagers. Bianca is what’s missing in literature and probably desperately sought after by teens, a sort of Holden Caulfield for this generation. She has no illusions about “true luv” teen romance; instead, her concerns are grounded in the reality of family tensions, arguments with friends, and wavering self-esteem.

While Bianca’s aggression and cynicism may grate on many readers’ sensitivities (including, occasionally, mine), I was still able to see where she was coming from. We need to dispense with our illusion of teen girls as virginal, hopelessly romantic, and sweet-sixteen-and-never-been-kissed, because the truth is that there are a lot more girls out there like Bianca than we care to admit, and they will jump at this relatable book.

The other characters in THE DUFF are nicely three-dimensional too, despite the fact that their problems occasionally seem a little too convenient and piled-on for plot’s sake. Bianca’s feisty hot-and-cold relationship with Wesley, in particular, is smoldering. Their initial coming together was a bit rough—I had some trouble believing that something like this would happen—but once they got going, boy, did they get going. And not just in sexual terms, either (though there is plenty of that, so if you’re uncomfortable with sex in literature, go somewhere else). Gone is the age-old idea that teen romance should consist of sweet heroines and reformed bad-boy love interests. In THE DUFF, Bianca and Wesley are constantly at odds with one another, and Bianca is not afraid to yell at him and say what she thinks. Even if this type of romance is not exactly the best model (though neither is the passive female/bad-boy male one), it makes for one heck of an exciting read.

THE DUFF reminds me of why romantic “screwball” comedies can be so great: for the characters’ chemistry and the sharp dialogue. It’s wish fulfillment to an extent (how I sometimes wish I could get away with Bianca’s cynicism and attract a jerk-turned-sweetie like Wesley), but it’s also highly relatable, and I have no doubt that there will be a legion of girls out there who can see parts of themselves in Bianca. I can’t wait to see what Kody Keplinger has for us next!

Writing: 4/5
Characters: 4/5
Plot: 5/5

Overall Rating: 4.5 out of 5


Cover discussion: 4 out of 5 - I like it a decent amount. It's big, it's bold, and it's in your face. There have been complaints that the Bianca model on the cover is too pretty to be the DUFF, but the thing with being the DUFF is that everyone feels like the DUFF every once in a while, so it's not like Bianca is supposed to be exceptionally hideous or anything. She is, in fact, an average girl with average insecurities about her looks.

Poppy / Sept. 7, 2010 / Hardcover / 288pp. / $16.99

ARC received at the Teen Author Carnival in May!

Thursday, September 2, 2010

Guardians of Ga'Hoole Giveaway!

To celebrate the upcoming September 24th release of the movie The Legends of the Guardians: The Owls of Ga'Hoole, Big Honcho Media has allowed me to host a giveaway!

Two (2) winners will receive:
  • A copy of Guardians of Ga'Hoole: The Capture by Kathryn Lasky
  • A copy of the first book in Kathryn Lasky's new series, Wolves of the Beyond: Lone Wolf

About the Book – Guardians of Ga’Hoole: The Capture
When Soren, a young owlet, mysteriously falls from his nest one evening, he’s plucked up and taken to the sinister St. Aegolius Academy for Orphaned Owls. Once there, he must use his wits and bravery to escape his captors. If Soren can learn to fly, he might just be able to take refuge with a group of brave owls he’d thought only to be a legend—the Guardians of Ga’Hoole! Visit the official Ga'Hoole site: http://www.scholastic.com/gahoole

About the Book – Wolves of the Beyond: Lone Wolf
In the harsh wilderness beyond Ga’Hoole, a wolf mother hides in fear. Her newborn pup, otherwise healthy, has a twisted leg. The mother knows the rigid rules of her kind. The pack cannot have weakness. Her pup must be abandoned on a desolate hill—condemned to die. But alone in the forest, the pup, Faolan, does the unthinkable. He survives. This is his story—the story of the wolf pup who rises up to change forever the Wolves of the Beyond. Find out more at http://www.scholastic.com/wolvesofthebeyond/.

About the Author:
Kathryn Lasky is the Newbery Honor author of over one hundred fiction and nonfiction books for children and young adults. She lives with her husband in Cambridge, Massachusetts. You can visit her online at www.kathrynlasky.com

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Have you seen the movie trailer in your recent visits to the movie theatres? If not, consider watching it below. Talk about an epic animal fantasy animation!



To enter:
  • Fill out the form below.
  • Answer the entry question relevantly.
  • Each person may enter only once.
  • This giveaway is open to US residents only.
  • Ends Friday, September 17, 2010.

Good luck!

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Waiting on Wednesday (80)

I generally try not to feature more than one book at a time on WoW posts, but several books that I have long been pining for finally revealed their covers recently, and I couldn't resist!

Across the Universe by Beth Revis
(Razorbill / Jan. 11, 2011)

Seventeen-year-old Amy joins her parents as frozen cargo aboard the vast spaceship Godspeed and expects to awaken on a new planet, three hundred years in the future. Never could she have known that her frozen slumber would come to an end fifty years too soon and that she would be thrust into the brave new world of a spaceship that lives by its own rules.
Amy quickly realizes that her awakening was no mere computer malfunction. Someone—one of the few thousand inhabitants of the spaceship—tried to kill her. And if Amy doesn’t do something soon, her parents will be next.
Now, Amy must race to unlock Godspeed’s hidden secrets. But out of her list of murder suspects, there’s only one who matters: Elder, the future leader of the ship and the love she could never have seen coming.

I've known Beth from her blog before she got her book deal and became a mega-star author. Doesn't her debut novel sound fantastic? A murder mystery aboard a spaceship--gotta love me some good sci-fi! And what a gorgeous cover. I was so anxious, hoping that she'd get a really good one, and this one has a total movie poster vibe to it that would look fantastic blown up and hung on a wall. I'm an astrophysics nerd, so I'm absolutely gaga over the bottom half of that cover, and the top half is creepily sci-fi. You can read Chapter 1 at the book's website too! Yayyy, Beth!

Fall for Anything by Courtney Summers
(St. Martin's Griffin / Dec. 21, 2010)

When Eddie Reeves’s father commits suicide her life is consumed by the nagging question of why? Why when he was a legendary photographer and a brilliant teacher? Why when he had a daughter who loved him more than anyone else in the world? When she meets Culler Evans, a former student of her father’s and a photographer himself, an instant and dangerous attraction begins. He seems to know more about her father than she does and could possibly hold the key to the mystery surrounding his death. But Eddie’s vulnerability has weakened her and Culler Evans is getting too close. Her need for the truth keeps her hanging on… but some questions should be left unanswered.

Courtney's books are auto-buys for me. I don't care if she chooses to write about boarding schools, or vampires, or rainbow-striped unicorns... I will read it. So happy she has another book coming out soon!

Where She Went by Gayle Forman
(Dutton / April 19, 2011)

The sequel to If I Stay, from Adam's point of view 3 years later. Adam, now a rising rock star, and Mia, a successful cellist, reunite in New York and reconnect after the horrific events that tore them apart when Mia almost died in a car accident three years earlier.

There's not much about this book out there yet (except for the teaser tour that's been going on these past few weeks), but this is an absolute must for me. If I Stay had me bawling for hours and hours, and, uh, this cover? Total cover love. Yes, I'm aware it's another picture of a female model, but I don't care, I love the saturation and the wind in her hair and the bluish-gray background.

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I am SO UTTERLY EXCITED for these three books!

I'm doing the Banned Books Reading Challenge!


I'm signing up for the Banned Books Reading Challenge! (Obviously.) You can read more about it and sign up here. This is my main sign-up post, where I will link to my posted reviews of banned books, as well as any other relevant posts I will make between September 1, 2010 and October 15, 2010.

My goal is to read at least 7 banned or challenged books, mostly ones from my own TBR collection, so that I may be finally able to get to these posts, some of which I've wanted to get around to for a while:

The Amber Spyglass by Philip Pullman
Crank by Ellen Hopkins
Lessons from a Dead Girl by Jo Knowles
Feed by M. T. Anderson
Hero by Perry Moore
Shade's Children by Garth Nix
Flowers for Algernon by Daniel Keyes
The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood
The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian by Sherman Alexie
Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov
The Amulet of Samarkand by Jonathan Stroud
Blood Promise and Spirit Bound by Richelle Mead
Al Capone Does My Shirts by Gennifer Choldenko
Diary of a Wimpy Kid by Jeff Kinney
Someday This Pain Will Be Useful to You by Peter Cameron

Can't wait to start reading some of these!

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