Honey, Baby, Sweetheart by Deb Caletti

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(Paperback - Reprint)

Reader Rating: (26 ratings)

Detailed Rating: "Realism" See All

  • Publisher: Simon & Schuster Children's Publishing
  • Pub. Date: August 2005
  • ISBN-13: 9780689864742
  • Sales Rank: 74,492
  • Age Range: Young Adult
  • 320pp
  • Edition Description: Reprint
 
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Synopsis

I'm not usually a reckless person. What happened the summer of my junior year was not about recklessness. It was about the way a moment, a single moment, can change things and make you decide to try to be someone different.

Ruby McQueen is a sixteen-year-old high school student with the name, she thinks, of a rodeo cowgirl porn star, or, maybe worse, a Texas beauty queen runner-up. Her mother, Ann, one of the town librarians, was reading too much Southern literature before Ruby was born, and Chip, Ruby's father, who was already dreaming of Nashville stardom, thought it would make a great stage name someday. Soon after Chip Jr. was born, Chip left to try his luck in the music business and ended up at the Gold Nugget Amusement Park one state over. He returns occasionally for visits that turn Ann's heart upside down, and Ruby's stomach inside out.

It is summer in the northwest town of Nine Mile Falls, a place where brown bears sometimes show up in the shopping mall and people in hang gliders soar down the mountains and sometimes get stuck dangling from the trees. Ruby, ordinarily dubbed The Quiet Girl, finds herself hanging out with gorgeous, rich, thrill-seeking Travis Becker. With Travis, Ruby can be someone she's never been before: Fearless. Powerful. But Ruby is in over her head, and finds she is risking more and more when she's with him.

In an effort to keep Ruby occupied and mend her own broken heart, Ann drags Ruby to the weekly book club she runs for seniors. At first Ruby can't imagine a more boring way to spend an afternoon, but she is soon charmed by the Casserole Queens (named, quite ironically, after women who bring casseroles to new widowers' homes in hopes ofsnagging a husband). When the group discovers one of their own members is the subject of the tragic love story they are reading, Ann and Ruby ditch their respective obsessions to spearhead a reunion between the long-ago lovers. But this mission turns out to be more than just a road trip. Somewhere along the way Ruby and her mother learn the true meaning of love and freedom from it, individual purpose, and the real ties that bind.

This lyrical, multigenerational story of love, loss, and redemption speaks to everyone who has ever been in love -- and lived to tell the tale.

Right then one of the garage doors went up, giving me the fright of my life. I felt frozen in place, and I wasn't sure if I would seem more guilty staying where I was or walking on after I'd already surely been spotted. I don't even know why I felt so bad when it was really only a glimpse I had been stealing. My feet, by default, made the decision whether we were staying or going -- they wouldn't move. So as the door went up, same as a curtain when a play is starting, revealing Travis Becker on that almost stage, I was still standing there, staring.

I didn't know it was Travis then, of course. I only saw this boy, good-looking, oh God, with a helmet under one arm, looking at me with this bemused smile. Right away I got that Something About To Happen feeling. Right away I knew he was bad, and that it didn't matter.

-- from Honey, Baby, Sweetheart


Annotation

Finalist for the 2004 National Book Award for Young People's Literature

Publishers Weekly

Ultimately rewarding, this novel about a high school girl who steps out of her role as "The Quiet Girl" for a summer of "passion and adventure... the stuff of the books at the Nine Mile Library where my mother works," shares both the strengths and pitfalls of Caletti's The Queen of Everything. When Ruby gets involved with handsome, motorcycle-riding and rich Travis, she likes that he sees her as fearless. But he is also dangerous, and spellbound Ruby gradually gets sucked into first reckless and then criminal acts. In a concerted effort to help Ruby break away from Travis, her librarian mother, who has just endured a betrayal of her own, begins overseeing Ruby's schedule and takes her to the book club she facilitates for feisty senior citizens, the Casserole Queens-which leads to a whole other story line involving one of their members, a stroke victim who may or may not have been the lover of a famous author. There is a lot of plot, often requiring the audience's leaps of faith over not especially believable moments, and Caletti's prose, laden with strikingly apt comparisons, can make this book feel dense. Even so, so much here is uncommonly vivid, especially the exchanges among Ruby, her mother and her younger brother. Readers who stay with it will find thoughtful and authentically inspiring messages about trusting in themselves enough to insist on a love that means more than being someone's "honey, baby, sweetheart." Ages 12-up. (May) Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

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Biography

Deb Caletti's first novel for teens was The Queen of Everything, about which Kirkus Reviews raved, "Caletti expertly succeeds in capturing the way a smart teen can grasp and skewer her world" and Publishers Weekly announced, "[This] marks Caletti as a writer to watch." Deb grew up in the San Francisco Bay Area, and now lives with her family in the Pacific Northwest. She steals her best lines from her mother, her kids, and the dog, who doesn't seem to mind. When she is not writing books or reading them, Deb is a painter, a lyricist, and a 2001 recipient of the Artist Trust/Washington State Arts Commission Fellowship for Literature. She is currently working on her next novel for teens.

Customer Reviews

Honey, Baby, Sweetheart Evan Sutton, a high school student at Hewitt, 11-24-08 Tby 82392

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November 24, 2008: he book Honey, Baby Sweetheart, by Deb Caletti, is about an ordinary good girl named Ruby McQueen, who falls for the popular ?bad boy?, Travis Becker. Ruby had been known as ?The Quiet Girl? at her school after she had two very embarrassing events that ruined her social life, so when the rich, gorgeous Travis Becker shows an interest in her, she dives in head first. I liked the characters because I can relate to them. I am a lot like Ruby because I am also very quiet, and I think that if I was put in her shoes, I would do the same thing. The book is about Ruby getting into trouble with her new boyfriend, Travis, and when her mother finds out she makes her stay away from him as much as she can. They go on a trip together and along the way Ruby discovers things about herself that make her a lot more confident and more willing to stay away from trouble.
One reason as to why I chose to read this book is because I had read another book that Deb Caletti wrote before, and thought that she was a very good writer. I also chose this book because I enjoy reading books about teen drama, and after reading the description on the back, it made me want to know what kind of trouble Travis and Ruby got in to. I thought that this was a very good book, there is never a dull moment in it and it keeps you interested. Every time you think it?s about to end, something even bigger happens. It is very unpredictable at the very end with the decision she makes. I would recommend this book to anyone who enjoys drama, adventure, and teen love affairs.

Honey, Baby, Sweetheartby Anonymous

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November 23, 2008: I read Honey, Baby, Sweetheart by Deb Caletti. I found the novel because a friend of mine read the novel and said that it was a good story. There are many things I liked about the book. Some things I liked were that it is a book that is easy to relate to, easy to understand, easy to read, and has humor through out the entire novel. There are also things I did not like about it. A couple of things I do not like are the beginning of the novel, and how there is a lot of unneeded facts through out.

I liked more things about Honey, Baby Sweetheart than I did not. The story being about a teenage girl who is struggling with her emotions makes it really easy to relate to. The fact that the book is based in present time also makes it easy to relate to. Even though the first chapter of the book is hard to get into because it is a slow start, the plot of the rest of the novel is very enticing. Also, The humor in the story makes it more interesting. The humor pulls you back in as a reader when you start to get bored. The embarrassing stories Ruby tells in the first chapter were the funniest to me. A lot of teenage girls in today's society, past, and present, have problems with their relationships with boys, parents, and siblings, just like Ruby McQueen does in Honey, Baby Sweetheart. Many people can relate to her nearly non-existent father-daughter relationship or her emotional mother-daughter relationship.

Deb Caletti's novel Honey, Baby, Sweetheart is a wonderful book full of drama and love. The drama, humor, and being able to relate to the story makes it a really good book. I would most certainly recommend others to read Calleti's novel. Deb Caletti did a wonderful job writing Honey, Baby, Sweetheart.


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