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Winner of the Michael L. Printz Award
An ALA Best Book for Young Adults
An ALA Quick Pick
A Los Angeles Times 2005 Book Prize Finalist
A New York Public Library Book for the Teen Age
A 2005 Booklist Editor's Choice
A 2005 School Library Journal Best Book of the Year
Before. Miles "Pudge" Halter is done with his safe life at home. His whole life has been one big non-event, and his obsession with famous last words has only made him crave "the Great Perhaps" even more (François Rabelais, poet). He heads off to the sometimes crazy and anything-but-boring world of Culver Creek Boarding School, and his life becomes the opposite of safe. Because down the hall is Alaska Young. The gorgeous, clever, funny, sexy, self-destructive, screwed up, and utterly fascinating Alaska Young. She is an event unto herself. She pulls Pudge into her world, launches him into the Great Perhaps, and steals his heart. Then. . . . After. Nothing is ever the same.
Winner of the 2006 Michael L. Printz Award
Teenager Miles chronicles his first year at boarding school. According to PW, "The novel's chief appeal lies in Miles's well-articulated lust (for Alaska, the title girl) and his initial excitement about being on his own for the first time." Ages 14-up. (Jan.) Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information.
More Reviews and RecommendationsJohn Green attended a boarding school not unlike Alaska's Culver Creek. After graduating from college in 2000, he worked as a chaplain at a children's hospital. John's experiences with patients and their families during intense crises solidified his desire to write for teens about the challenge of confronting loss. John works for Booklist and is also a commentator for National Public Radio's national afternoon newsmagazine, "All Things Considered," and Chicago's NPR affiliate, WBEZ. "Nick," about John's experiences as a chaplain, appeared on "Driveway Moments" a "best-of" two-CD set, which NPR released in August 2004. John was recently featured in the Tribune's RedEye edition and on television as one of Chicago's "Fabulous 20somethings." He lives in New York City.
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November 20, 2009: Looking for Alaska is undoubtedly one of the best novels I have ever had the pleasure of reading. The narration by Miles "Pudge" Halter was just so raw and honest... I personally felt his loss. Our title character, Alaska Young, was just incredibly developed and a true embodiment of a young, brilliant, impulsive, and lost teenage girl. I felt her moods and adored her sarcasm and wanted to throw the book against the wall due to her insatiable pessimism. That said, all her complexities just made me love her character that much more. Because, at some point in ones life, its easy to see yourself in Alaska Young. The story in terribly moving and so fascinatingly deep... people of all ages could take something away from this story. I highly recommend!!! John Green in a genius!
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October 10, 2009: In Looking for Alaska, author John Green uses the idea of societal power that prohibits smoking, drinking, and sex by adolescents, to explore adolescent disregard for these policies while at the same time exercising their own power over these very prohibitions. The theme of teen desire to exercise his or her power to smoke, as well as drink and have sex, and thus break the rules and seem "cool" literally permeate the text much like smoke will a wool sweater worn into an Irish pub in winter. The reader sees the use of adults trying to use power to control adolescent behavior when Miles'/Pudge's father says "No drugs. No Drinking. No cigarettes" (Green 7). On page 23 Green has Pudge explain through narrative the Culver Creek boarding school conditions that will result in expulsion, namely genital contact (sex), drinking, drugs and later on page 56 punishable offenses such as smoking. Yet throughout the text the reader is bombarded with examples of adolescents breaking the rules and of exercising their power by smoking. As a university student today I see a tremendous decrease in smoking in Paris, Berlin, and major U.S. cities. It is finally uncool to smoke.
Marilyn French, a feminist theorist, says in her paper "Disturbing the universe, power and repression in adolescent literature" that "There is power-to, which refers to ability, capacity, and connotes a kind of freedom, and there is power-over, which refers to domination" (6). This is the back and forth that Green subjects the reader to in Looking for Alaska. Examples of smoking in the first 80 pages are numerous with the first being "at the lake" (Green 16). The reader learns that the author believes that adolescents think this is cool when Pudge, after watching the Colonel blow smoke from a cigarette states "I had to admit: He looked cool doing it" (Green 17). Even the cover of the book, a picture of a candle going out, looks eerily like the smoke of a cigarette. Does the author have any stock in the tobacco industry?The other theme in the book is the ever present teen death theme, and how teens react. This old sock is about worn out and I only acknowledge it because it is present. No one really cares that the Alaska character died. Quite the contrary. Most in my class where quite okay with it.I Also Recommend: The Truth about Forever, Abundance of Katherines, Paper Towns, Leaving Paradise, Feed.