FICTION

The Great American Whatever

288p. ebook available. S. & S. Mar. 2016. Tr $17.99. ISBN 9781481404099.
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RedReviewStarGr 10 Up—In the six months since his sister was killed in a car accident, Quinn has hardly left his bedroom. He hasn't gone to school or talked to his best friend and has barely interacted with his heartbroken mother. He hasn't turned on his phone, either, knowing the last text his sister sent before running a red light was to him. Urged on by his best friend, Geoff, Quinn reluctantly emerges from his isolation just in time to meet a cute boy, turn 17, rediscover his passion for writing screenplays, and uncover some big secrets about the people he thought he knew best. He also gets some advice from a former idol, a neighbor turned Hollywood screenwriter: forget the rules of what's expected in a script and just write the truth. For Quinn, who seeks solace in his daydreamy scripts with imagined conversations and outcomes that he can control, this is a hard pill to swallow, especially as he's learning some truths he's not really sure he likes. Even under the weight of grief, Quinn's conversational and charming narrative voice effervesces, mixing humor and vulnerability in typical Federle style. Quinn's story is at turns sad, funny, awkward, and endearing as he figures out friendship, romance, coming out, and moving on.
VERDICT Federle's YA debut about life's unscripted moments has wide appeal and is an essential purchase for all collections. Readers will be instant fans of the funny and honest Quinn.—Amanda MacGregor, Great River Regional Library, St. Cloud, MN
After his sister's fatal car crash and his father's subsequent departure, sixteen-year-old Quinn's screenwriting ambitions are on hold and his social life has evaporated. When best friend Geoff drags him to a party, Quinn meets college-guy Amir and reemerges from his shell as they develop a mutual attraction. The entire cast is well rounded in Federle's humorous, heartbreaking, and heartwarming YA debut.
Sixteen-year-old Quinn's life is static: less than a year after his sister's fatal car crash in front of their school and his father's subsequent departure, his screenwriting ambitions have been put on hold, his social life has evaporated, and he and his grieving mother stay mostly confined to their house. When his best friend Geoff (who is straight) manages to drag him to a party, Quinn meets college-guy Amir and reemerges from his shell as they develop a mutual attraction. Fearing being seen as a pitiable figure defined only by tragedy, Quinn avoids sharing details of his personal life with Amir, but as the story progresses and he is pushed toward honesty, he begins to reveal his perspective on his sister's accident, and in doing so learns that it might not be the whole story. Although Quinn describes his life as "a fairly standard coming-of-age LGBT genre film, with a somewhat macabre horror twist," the narrative focus is less on coming out ("It just seems like such a hassle to come out. I want to just be out") than it is equal parts romance and friendship, humor and healing. Quinn's relationships with his mom and Geoff are particularly well developed, but the entire cast is well rounded, flawed, funny, and human. Humorous, heartbreaking, and heartwarming, Federle's (Better Nate Than Ever) YA debut takes its place in the lineage of Stephen Chbosky's The Perks of Being a Wallflower and John Green's coming-of-age tales. kazia berkley-cramer

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