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You are here: Home / Archives for David Levithan

David Levithan

Five Contemporary YA Books to Read before YALC

19th June 2016 By Julianne Leave a Comment

As host of the 2016 YALC Readathon Challenge I’ve been thinking a lot about what books I would recommend by authors attending YALC. Hopefully I’ll do several posts in this series, but I thought I’d start with five contemporary YA books, as that is my favourite genre!

1. Girl Out of Water, by Nat Luurtsema

View on Instagram

This is the first book I read for the YALC Readathon Challenge (go on, join me!) and it was a great way to *PUN ALERT* dive in – Girl Out of Water follows Lou Brown’s attempts to find new friends and a new place in the world following her failure to get into Olympic swimming school.
It’s funny (Nat is on the Funny YA panel), heartwarming, and deals with an issue I think is underexplored in fiction – coping with failure. Not everyone is going to succeed against all the odds. Sometimes the odds are never in your favour – and you keep going, like Lou learns to do.


2. Love Song, by Sophia Bennett

I have read some amazing books so far this year and plan to read many more – but I’m sure whatever happens this will be in my top five. I was not expecting to fall in love with a story about a girl who goes on tour with a boyband, but reader, I fell HARD.

I am finding @sophiabennett‘s Love Song so unputdownable I am literally reading it while I #ukyachat. Not even kidding I’m on page 156

— Julianne Benford (@ladyjulianne) April 8, 2016

@SnugglingonSofa @sophiabennett I basically had to abandon my own writing to finish it because it was so addictive! I even ignored Two Dots!

— Julianne Benford (@ladyjulianne) April 11, 2016

I am really looking forward to the Music in YA panel!

3. London Belongs to Us, by Sarra Manning

Both Sarra Manning’s 2016 releases. View on Instagram

If you’ve never read any books by Sarra before this is a great place to start – though if you’re spoiler-averse you may want to read Guitar Girl and Adorkable first. An enormously entertaining love letter to London filled with snappy one-liners, it follows Sunny’s pursuit of her wayward boyfriend (or is he ex-boyfriend?) over one night and features pastries, parties, perilous road journeys, dramatic confrontations and hairspray. There are also several girls you’ll wish you could be friends with – highly appropriate as Sarra is on the #SquadGoals panel.

4. Boy Meets Boy, by David Levithan
Look at my beautiful hardback. Just look at it.

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If just gazing at the cover isn’t enough to make you pick it up, this is an LGBT classic. It’s a pretty straightfoward romance story with the usual tropes but it’s set at a school where there isn’t really any homophobia – it’s a utopian vision of what school should be like, and although it’s not realistic, it’s lovely to disappear into a world where things are a little more as they should be.

5. My Secret Rockstar Boyfriend, by Eleanor Wood

From my ‘Music March’. View on Instagram

This is a funny and surprisingly realistic story about Tuesday Cooper, a music blogger who starts getting comments from her favourite rockstar. One thing leads to another and he becomes the secret boyfriend of the title, getting her into trouble with friends and family alike. It’s really interesting seeing how she deals with the mess she’s in and moves towards adulthood.

What books by YALC authors do you recommend? Would you choose different books by these authors? Let me know! And don’t forget to vote for your favourites!

Filed Under: Recommendation Lists Tagged With: book chat, book review, David Levithan, Eleanor Wood, Nat Luurtsema, Sarra Manning, Sophia Bennett, YALC

Book Review: Nick & Norah’s Infinite Playlist, by Rachel Cohn and David Levithan

24th January 2014 By Julianne 4 Comments

Nick, teenage boy and bassist in an average queercore band, looks down from the stage one night and sees his newly-ex-girlfriend, Tris in the crowd. He can’t bear the thought of having to exchange greetings with her and the guy she is standing with, so he turns to the girl next to him, and asks her to pretend to be his girlfriend for the next five minutes.

Norah has a lot on her own mind – her future, music, her own Evil Ex – and if it were just her she had to look after, she’d tell Nick where to go, but he might have a van or a car, and she needs to get her drunken friend Caroline home in one piece…

My first ebook! I really liked this, it was just the kind of YA book I’d have loved as a teenager – people, cooler than me, having relationship issues and new romances, swearing a lot, and participating in makeout scenes that give those in Diary of a Crush a real run for their money! Phew!

Nick and Norah’s Infinite Playlist, as you might expect, is told from the alternating perspectives of Nick and Norah. I preferred Nick’s narration, as I expected. I’ve read solo books by Rachel Cohn and David Levithan before and I like David Levithan’s writing more. But even though I didn’t like her narration quite as much, Norah was still an interesting character with an enjoyable voice.

Both Nick and Norah tell their stories in a style that is very stream-of-consciousness, and at times I found this hard to follow, especially as the whole story takes place over the course of one night/day and the pace varies a lot. Every now and then I’d have to stop, go back a few pages and re-read to remind myself what was physically going on.

I really liked the secondary characters. There’s a whole cast of weird and wonderful individuals who show up, disappear, and re-appear throughout the novel. I loved that although Tris seems pretty horrible at first, nicer sides to her personality are revealed later on.

I saw the film adapation of Nick and Norah’s Infinite Playlist, with Michael Cera and Kat Dennings (object of much girlcrushing) a few years ago and really liked it. The book is quite different – the film has more of a plot beside the romance – but they are both enjoyable in their own right.

Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: book review, David Levithan, music, musicians, Rachel Cohn, review, teen fiction, teenage fiction, YA, young adult

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Hi! I'm Julianne and this is my book blog. Click my picture to read more about me.

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