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Teen rocker Ritchie Sudden is pretty sure his life has just jumped the shark. Except he hates being called a teen, his band doesn't play rock, and "jumping the shark" is yet another dumb cliché. Part of Ritchie wants to drop everything and walk away. Especially the part that's serving ninety days in a juvenile detention center.
Telling the story of the year leading up to his arrest, Ritchie grabs readers by the throat before (politely) inviting them along for the (max-speed) ride. A battle of the bands looms. Dad split about five minutes before Mom's girlfriend moved in. There's the matter of trying to score with the dangerously hot Ravenna Woods while avoiding the dangerously huge Spence Proffer—not to mention just trying to forget what his sister, Beth, said the week before she died.
Acclaimed author Sean Beaudoin's latest offering is raw, razor-sharp, and genuinely hilarious.
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Creators
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Publisher
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Awards
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Release date
August 6, 2013 -
Formats
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Kindle Book
- ISBN: 9780316235112
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OverDrive Read
- ISBN: 9780316235105
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EPUB ebook
- ISBN: 9780316235105
- File size: 4316 KB
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Languages
- English
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Levels
- ATOS Level: 4.4
- Lexile® Measure: 670
- Interest Level: 9-12(UG)
- Text Difficulty: 3
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Reviews
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Kirkus
July 1, 2013
Smart-mouthed rock guitarist Ritchie Sudden forms a band and spends time in a juvenile-detention facility. Ritchie's first-person narrative alternates between two present-tense storylines. In one, he is locked in an institution he calls Progressive Progress, where therapists push him to keep a journal and hardened fellow detainees arrange fights for other boys to bet on. In the other, which takes place before his imprisonment, Ritchie and his friend Elliot Hella, "the dude too cool to know it, too weird to be popular, too hardcore to give a shit," start a band in hopes of competing in Rock Scene 2013. The stylized narration moves quickly, littered with jokes and references, some clever, some oddly dated ("there's the Bridge, which, yeah, is a bridge, but with no water underneath, troubled or otherwise") and some jarringly harsh ("football is a concussion factory and cheerleaders are hot pockets of chlamydia"). Larger-than-life characters are mostly played to comic effect, often successfully: Chaos the bongo drummer (who pronounces his name "Chowus") and El Hella himself are two standouts. Behind the music quest, sarcasm and pursuit of girls, however, lies a more complicated and often compelling story about family, grief and flawed coping mechanisms. Hit-and-miss humor, but worth a read for budding rock stars. (Fiction. 14-18)COPYRIGHT(2013) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
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School Library Journal
Starred review from November 1, 2013
Gr 10 Up-This coming-of-age story is told in alternating story lines, leading up to Ritchie Sudden's arrest and his time in a juvenile detention center. Three years before the story begins, the teen's sister died in a drunk-driving accident, his father left and married a younger woman, and his mother started dating a younger woman. Ritchie picked up the guitar and poured his emotions into it. Now, he is entering his junior year in high school. He is in a hard-core band with his only friend, El Hella. They are trying to build their band, while Ritchie jumps from one bad relationship to the next and commits a felony. When the band rises to stardom, Ritchie has an emotional explosion that ends in his arrest. His time in juvie is told through short journal entries. His plan to keep from getting beaten up is to be antisocial and keep his head down. This doesn't work out and two inmates try to kill him. He narrowly escapes by pulling off an incredible stunt and finally comes out of his shell. There are a lot of messages about the importance of safe driving and staying away from drugs and alcohol without being preachy. This is not a typical rock band story; it is actually interesting. The author does a brilliant job getting into the head of a troubled teen and does not shy away from racy topics.-Erik Carlson, White Plains Public Library, NY
Copyright 2013 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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Booklist
Starred review from August 1, 2013
Grades 9-12 *Starred Review* Smash your Stratocaster, pop the devil horns, and bite the head off a batthis headbanger is so right-on with passion and detail that you'll be smelling the garage-band funk and feeling the bass rattle your teeth. Eighteen-year-old Ritchie Sudden is stuck in juvie and tasked with journaling how he got there. In short: girls, music, and some bullshit trauma that Ritchie doesn't even want to talk about. It starts, as always, with best bud Elliot Hella, he of the shaved head and thick muttonchops, whose go-nowhere life hinges upon winning a big-time battle of the bands. El Hella and Ritchie have the requisite crappy equipment and sloppy chops to make hardcore historyall they need is a drummer, a singer, and a badass band name. ( Sin Sistermouth ain't cutting it.) Beaudoin is the Fred Astaire of comic writing, translating each sentence into a manic dance routine of half-invented jargon ( chewing the profunda-cud ) on his way to blessedly noncloying coming-of-age glory. The book is hugely generous: in sex, in violence, in attitude, and especially in heart, as Ritchie gets it through his thick skull what punk really means. And the performance scenes? Dude. If you can't grok the monster energy of these glorious idiots flailing around onstage, you're already dead.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2013, American Library Association.) -
The Horn Book
July 1, 2014
While in juvie, hardcore rocker Ritchie must keep a journal every day about the events that led to his incarceration. Seamlessly shifting between his experiences inside Progressive Progress and his prior adventures in the underground music scene, Ritchie reluctantly examines his life and the tragedies that shaped him. Like hardcore music, Beaudoin's prose focuses on rhythm with punchy, abrasive, often comedic narration.(Copyright 2014 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)
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Formats
- Kindle Book
- OverDrive Read
- EPUB ebook
Languages
- English
Levels
- ATOS Level:4.4
- Lexile® Measure:670
- Interest Level:9-12(UG)
- Text Difficulty:3
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