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Going Nowhere Faster by Sean Beaudoin

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(Hardcover)

  • Age Range: 12 and up
  • Pub. Date: April 2007
  • 240pp

    Reader Rating: (9 ratings)

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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: April 2007
    • Publisher: Little, Brown Books for Young Readers
    • Format: Hardcover, 240pp
    • Age Range: 12 and up

    Synopsis

    Stan Smith has the world's dullest name, and the world's dullest life to go with it. At 17, the former junior chess champion turned "Town's Laziest Register Monkey at the Town's Only Video Store" has no car, no college, and, of course, no girl. If that weren't pathetic enough, he's got an organic-food-freak vegan mother, an eccentric inventor father, a dead-end job, a dog with a flatulence problem, and a former classmate threatening to kill him. With a 165 IQ, Stan was expected to Be Something and Go Somewhere. But when all he has is a beat-up old bike that keeps getting vandalized, he's going nowhere, faster.

    Children's Literature

    Seventeen-year-old Stan Smith with an I. Q. of 165 is unsure of where he is heading after the summer, since there are no college applications or acceptances in the works. Currently, he is employed at Happy Video and knows his movies. He wants to write movie scripts and shares with the reader a number of treatments for his drafts of film ideas. Stan feels that his life is rather simple and plain, or so he believes. He is in love with Ellen who happens to be the former girlfriend of Chad Chilton. To complicate matters, Stan happens to set Chad's locker on fire and that is why Stan has sessions with Dr. Felder, a psychologist, which was the better choice compared to expulsion. The close encounter with a car while Stan is riding his bike leaves him a bit rattled; he suspects that Chad is after him and is seeking revenge with a number of threats. The story has a number of amusing surprises and twists as Stan begins to figure out his life and how things sometimes are not exactly what they seem from the outside.

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    Biography

    Like Stan Smith, Sean Beaudoin spent his childhood in a small town. He later earned a B.A. in photography, which he used as a springboard into a variety of jobs: construction laborer, bus boy, used book buyer, hotel desk clerk, camp counselor, statue repairman, dealer of jazz records on eBay, and reluctant telemarketer. He now resides in San Francisco with his wife and daughter.

    Customer Reviews

    Read This Immediately! It will change your life (ok, probably not but still a must read)!by warriordundermifflinER

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    January 02, 2009: Randomly found it at the book store. Refreshingly sarcastic. Love the pop culture references. Great first book from Sean Beaudoin! Looking forward to more.

    I Also Recommend: The Office - Season 1, A Great and Terrible Beauty (Gemma Doyle Series #1).

    The book Gong Nowhere Faster is a must read bookby Anonymous

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    November 21, 2008: This book makes me laugh so hard on what they say I think that I was giong to wet myself. Also it has some drama which it made me feel sorry for Stan that he dosn't like his name and he also lost his girlfriend. He may be a genius, but people don't even like him for being to smart.


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