Jeremy Fink and the Meaning of Life by Wendy Mass: Book Cover
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Jeremy Fink and the Meaning of Life by Wendy Mass

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(Paperback - Reprint)

  • Publisher: Little, Brown Books for Young Readers
  • Pub. Date: February 2008
  • ISBN-13: 9780316058490
  • Sales Rank: 4,543
  • Age Range: 8 to 12
  • 304pp
  • Edition Description: Reprint
 
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Synopsis

Jeremy Fink has been obsessed with the meaning of life ever since a box from his father arrived at his house five years after his father was killed in a car accident. Jeremy is determined to find the missing keys that will open the box that supposedly contains the meaning of life. Jeremy and his best friend Lizzy make it their summer quest to get inside the mysterious box. But after getting into some trouble, they get stuck doing community service together, helping an antique shop owner deliver things to different parts of the city. It turns out that these deliveries aren't always ordered, the recipients react unexpectedly, some with anger, some with tears. As Jeremy and Lizzy's summer adventures continue, they begin to discover the meaning of life and themselves along with it.

Publishers Weekly

What is the meaning of life? Mass (A Mango-Shaped Space) introduces a winning narrator who attempts to answer this question and ends up accomplishing much more. Jeremy and his best friend, Lizzy, are on a quest to discover Jeremy's purpose on earth before his 13th birthday. Set in New York City, the adventure begins when a mysterious box arrives. The package, assembled by his father before he died in a car accident five years prior (the man had a premonition of his early death), contains a sealed antique box inscribed with the message, "The Meaning of Life: For Jeremy Fink to Open on His 13th Birthday." The box can only be opened with a set of four keys, which have gone missing. Much of the novel's charm derives from Jeremy and Lizzy's unique friendship. Their personalities balance each other brilliantly-Lizzy the risktaker challenges Jeremy, who resists change. With less than a month to find the keys, the two meet a number of larger-than-life characters with their own life-lesson nuggets to bestow-most memorable among them the venerable pawnbroker, Mr. Oswald, for whom they make some surprising deliveries ("The harder something is to acquire, the more satisfying it is when you finally find it," says he). Jeremy and Lizzy find what they are looking for and more, but not where or in the way they expected. This exquisitely executed plot twist, combined with an ending that requires a few tissues, makes this soulful novel one not to miss. Ages 9-12. (Nov.) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

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Biography

Wendy Mass is the author of A Mango-Shaped Space and Leap Day. Wendy lives in Sparta, New Jersey with her husband and twin daughter and son.

Customer Reviews

Reviewed by Jennifer Wardrip, aka "The Genius" for TeensReadToo.comby TeensReadToo

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November 02, 2008: For Jeremy Fink, the meaning of life is pretty simple. Stay safe, stay focused, stay the course. This is Jeremy's life, until the day the postman delivers a package addressed to his mother. Unable to check his curiosity and the taunts of his best friend, Lizzy, Jeremy opens the package to find a surprise like no other. Inside the cardboard box is another box, one made of a beautiful wood, sanded to a breathtaking sheen, comprised of four intricate locks, and inscribed with the words "The Meaning of Life." Underneath those life-changing words are others, smaller, unmistakably carved by his father: "For Jeremy Fink To Open On His 13th Birthday."

For many kids, turning thirteen is a big deal. After all, you're about to become a legitimate teenager, a purveyor of mystic knowledge, an "almost-adult" in a world ruled by adults. For Jeremy, turning thirteen has always been a goal. Now, though, there's another, much more important goal--finding a way to open this magnificent box without breaking it, since no one seems to know where the four keys are that are needed to open the locks. Even more unimaginable is the fact that his father seems to have sent him his birthday gift from beyond the grave. You see, years ago, when Jeremy was eight, his father had died. Had died, actually, at the age of thirty-eight, two years before the fortune teller had told him on his own thirteenth birthday that he would die at age forty.

It's important to Jeremy to open that box. It's imperative. It's a necessity. Somehow, his father knew the true meaning of life, and he's managed to provide Jeremy with that tantalizing secret. But how will he get the box open without breaking it--something he refuses to do? How will he and Lizzy, the risk-taker best friend with the non-stop mouth, figure out where to get the keys that hold the answers to that all-important question? When one of their schemes to get the keys to the box goes awry, both Jeremy and Lizzy are forced into working for a mysterious man who may just end up having the answers they need.

JEREMY FINK AND THE MEANING OF LIFE is a wonderful, emotional read. Yes, I cried at the ending, and I'm not ashamed to admit it. This is a book that is about so much more than growing up; a book that is about so much more, even, than finding a way to open a birthday present. For Jeremy, those weeks before his thirteenth birthday are about becoming closer to the father he lost too soon, about learning the value of friendship, and about learning that the meaning of life, quite possibly, is something that each and every one of us can find inside ourselves.

Thanks to Ms. Mass for such an emotional, heartfelt read. This is a book perfect for both middle-school readers and older teens, and you won't go wrong picking up a copy for your library.

Great Bookby Anonymous

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October 30, 2008: Jeremy Fink and the Meaning of Life is a great book written by Wendy Mass. This fictional book will have your eyes glued to it! If you want adventure then pick this up. It?s not only adventurous but funny, sand, and it leaves you wanting more. Most kids would like this because it features to young kids who like to have fun but can tend to get into trouble. Jeremy isn?t an explorer and he doesn?t like to travel far from his apartment. He doesn?t like the big city. Lizzy his best friend, is audacious. She likes to find out things and explore. She sneaks into places where normally you wouldn?t be allowed to go. Places where you would get in trouble for. In New York you tend to get jostled. Jeremy is not the type to argue though. Jeremy had two parents, but his dad has died. Jeremy?s dad goes to a fortune teller and is told that he will die at 40. This is not true because he dies at 39. Before he died he came upon a man with a fancy box. He chooses this as the box for Jeremy Fink to open on his 13th birthday. There?s a problem though. This isn?t you ordinary box. It is triple sealed. The keys are lost and there is no way to recreate the keys. Jeremy Fink and his friend have to find the keys in all of New York City. So Jeremy Fink is stuck with a box with no keys. His best friend Lizzy has a plan. Go to the man?s office in the letter who claims he lost the keys, tear it up to find the keys, and search till you can find something. By the way try to sneak past a body guard, who can watch you?re every move. If you get caught then you?ll have to do a summer job or clean up the city. Well that?s what happens. They pick to work a summer job. Another problem is on the way though. This time it?s Lizzy?s problem. Lizzy is getting a period. She yells at Jeremy and wants to be alone. Jeremy?s mom helps her and she gets over it. The time has come and Lizzy and Jeremy are one step away from the box?s keys. The man they work for is leaving. He will let them get a present before he leaves to Florida. Lizzy chooses a doll and Jeremy a suitcase? with keys in it. Are four specific keys to Jeremy?s box in there? If you like books with adventure and fun this is for you. It?s straight to the point. I would recommend this book to anyone who loves reading. You will see many different sides to this story like sadness, funny, adventurous, and serious. You will not put this book down.


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