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You

A book by Charles Benoit

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Decent effort, interesting delivery

  • Aug 19, 2010
Rating:
+1
This book suffers from being over hyped, my cover had about 15 blurbs screaming how amazing, breathtaking, shattering, blah blah this book is, well maybe if all that was omitted and the letter from the editor which said that it will change your life and you will talk about it forever wasn't there I would have liked it more. The story is interesting but not above average, the author tries to grab the reader using the second person perspective, but comes out sounding a bit preachy and I certainly didn't feel the impact, it was different but nothing I would scream Allelujah! for. The best part of the story was the character of Zach, who sounds just like the guy from that Comedy Central Show Tosh.0, but he alone can't carry the book and he's simply a tool that stirs Kyle, the protagonist into an omelet of frustration and confusion with an ugly mess of an ending waiting for him. The only problem I have with Zach is that he simply seems like the deus ex machina way out for the author to deliver his message.

"You" can be a reminder to young people to stay strong to their beliefs, don't let the bullies and losers shake you, do your own thing, don't worry so much, spend some time with your parents, be good, be kind...This was a pretty fast read, things don't pick up until page 60 and by the time you're into page 200 you're wondering what is going on and how is it going to end, and it does end indeed but once I was done I kept going back to re-read the last and first page again, little confusing for younger people, but to each his own, this is the authors works and I'm simply stating my opinion on the story. Overall entertaining but just another book, I don't see it changing the world or anything.

- Kasia S.

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September 27, 2010
I love an honest review - you run into so much hyperbole (I LOVED IT - I HATED IT) that somehow the reviews that just say "eh - s'a'right" stand out as the ones Id rather read. Nice work!
 
September 08, 2010
I can't stand the Comedy Central guy who hosts the show Tosh.0. I think that character alone would have had me returning it to the library, lol! I've often found that over-hyped books are rarely as great as claimed. Some have surprised me...but not many. Thanks for the great review!
 
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More You reviews
review by . February 15, 2011
Writing in the second person (addressing the reader as "you =" while writing--"you walk in a room") is a tricky thing, David Klass handled it beautifully in You Don't Know Me.      Benoit tries to use the same conceit here but it doesn't come off quite as cleanly in this book which is told exclusively in the second person. Part of it might be reading about a male narrator when I'm not a guy, I don't know. What I can say is the main effect it …
review by . August 07, 2010
This is a hard hitting story about Kyle, an unhappy teenager who falls under the spell of a friend who is not a friend. He has more problems than just one sociopathic friend, but he is not yet a lost soul, nor is he a bad person. We watch him make a series of bad choices, distance himself from family and friends, fight with his teachers, and hide his true self from the girl that he loves. All of these are typical for a teen, but his choices have consequences.    The author tells …
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Kasia S. ()
Ranked #248
   I’m a total book lover; it eclipses all other hobbies, mainly of the horror genre that embraces all the things that make one sleep with their back to the wall. Horror is a lush terrain … more
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Wiki

Gr 8 Up–As the book opens, Kyle Chase wonders how he got himself into the dire situation he's in. Reflecting on the start of the school year, he recalls how his grades fell and he enrolled at Midlands High, while his friends headed to Odyssey. He met the hoodie crew and adopted their uniform of jeans, T-shirt, and black-hooded sweatshirts. He suppressed the guilt he felt after the group broke into the school. He tried to do the right thing and return a stolen wallet, but got suspended for three days for fighting. Doing catch-up work in the library, Kyle encounters witty and sarcastic Zack and chooses to follow him around. However, after losing a job opportunity, a potential girlfriend, and the respect of a teacher, Kyle begins to suspect that he is being sabotaged. Benoit's choice of second-person perspective allows readers to explore Kyle's motivations fully, but infuses the narrative with a moralizing undertone; an undertone that erupts during the teen's climactic self-evaluation. However, the sense of persecution and unfairness that dominates the text accurately captures his perspective. While the teen characters are well developed, the casual attention paid to the adults is obvious. When Kyle is offhandedly dismissed by his mother in an overheard conversation with his younger sister, the emotional response is honest and visceral. The rapid pace is well suited to the narrative, though sophisticated readers will be able to identify the twist exactly ...
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Details

ISBN-10: 0061947040
ISBN-13: 978-0061947049
Author: Charles Benoit
Genre: Children's Books, Teens
Publisher: HarperTeen
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