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The accidental genius of Weasel High / Rick Detorie.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: New York : Egmont USA, 2011.ISBN:
  • 9781606841495 :
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • [Fic] 22
Summary: Larkin Pace, a film-obsessed high school freshman, chronicles his experiences as he tries to raise money for a new camcorder and get a date with the girl who has been his best friend since third grade.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Shelving location Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Adult Book Phillipsburg Free Public Library YA Fiction Teen Spot YA FICTION D Available 36748001993957
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

A book for the Wimpy Kid who has grown into a Wimpy Teen
 
Larkin Pace desperately wants a new camcorder. How else is he going to become the next great filmmaker? But his dad won't give him any money, his sister is determined to make his life miserable, and his nemesis Dalton Cooke is trying to steal his girlfriend. Now this height-challenged aspiring director must chronicle his wacky life for a freshman English assignment.

Larkin Pace, a film-obsessed high school freshman, chronicles his experiences as he tries to raise money for a new camcorder and get a date with the girl who has been his best friend since third grade.

Reviews provided by Syndetics

Publishers Weekly Review

The problem with Detorie's strip One Big Happy has long been a hard one to overcome: it's just not that funny. This issue is handily dealt with in his refreshingly vivid and approachable YA illustrated novel, which strives for only the occasional chuckle and is more interested in telling the story of one very driven 14-year-old. Larkin Pace and his classmates must keep a weekly "notebook blog," the results compiled in Detorie's book, where Larkin rags on his parents, obsesses over his best friend Brooke (who he'd now like as a girlfriend), binges on film quotes (his dad is a film studies professor), and divulges his complicated scheme for becoming a Hollywood impresario by age 16. Detorie's sketchy illustrations punctuate a story told with an easy, self-deprecating humor steeped in adolescent modernity without overdoing the slang and up-to-the-minute references. While many of Larkin's nemeses are standard issue (annoying sister, omnipresent bully), his voice manages to be good-natured and assured without the addition of arrogance. Ages 12-up. (Apr.) Board and concept books to nurture an early love of reading. (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

School Library Journal Review

Gr 5 Up-Meet Larkin Pace. He hates his name. He doesn't get along with his sister. His friend Freddie is really weird. He has a crush on his friend Brooke. Schoolyard bully Dalton Cooke is his nemesis. When he grows up, he wants to be a filmmaker. By his own definition, Larkin's unique ability to memorize every line in every movie he's ever seen makes him an "accidental genius." The book is divided into several mini-chapters, as though Larkin were keeping a journal for a class. Spaced throughout these entries are amusing and sometimes poignant comic strips that illustrate the boy's often-painful adolescence. Of note is Larkin's unreciprocated crush on Brooke and his burgeoning friendship with an elderly neighbor for whom he does chores, charming retired actress Miss Sadie. Larkin serves as a relatable "everykid," and many readers will enjoy spending some time with him. Marketed as "a book for the Wimpy Kid who has grown up," it will nevertheless appeal both to tweens and young adults.-Ryan Donovan, New York Public Library (c) Copyright 2011. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Booklist Review

For his debut novel the creator of the long-running comic strip One Big Happy dishes up a ninth-grader's slice-of-life journal heavily interspersed with punch line-laden cartoons. Looking dismayed or bemused in nearly every picture, Larkin tallies Ten Things That I Hate About Being 14 (he only gets to number five before losing interest); relates encounters with his tempestuous big sister and his relentlessly nonverbal friend Freddie; sees his preconceptions crushed when Brooke, his BFF and presumed girlfriend since third grade, hooks up with the most noxious bully at school; and suffers a temporary setback to his dream of becoming a big-time film producer when his performance in a local TV commercial ends up on the cutting-room floor. Despite such reverses, Larkin proves to be a resilient sort, gifted with both likable parents (who wouldn't love to have a mom who brings a chainsaw and hockey mask to Career Day?) and a photographic memory when it comes to classic movies. An easygoing change of pace from the usual Sturm und Drang in preteen fiction.--Peters, John Copyright 2010 Booklist

Kirkus Book Review

Fourteen-year-old aspiring filmmaker Larkin Pace is documenting his daily life to prepare for the big screens of Hollywood. Before the cameras can get rolling on his masterpiece, though, Larkin must figure out how to keep his almost-girlfriend Brooke away from popular Dalton, how to keep his sister's ever-increasing drama out of his life and how to get his hands on the perfect video camera despite a depleted bank account. Packing his tale full of adolescent wackiness and angst, cartoonist Detorie strikes an excellent balance among school issues, family drama and personal aspirations, capturing the total teen experience. Larkin's cinematic passion is honest without pretension, though teen readers might wish there were more contemporary movie references. Embodying the extreme teen emotional mood swing, Larkin's sister Kelly will resonate with all those who have ever known a teenage diva. While Detorie keeps all plot points unified under a general film theme, some of the subplots could have been cut and the space used to develop Larkin and Brooke's relationship. Well-placed and well-done black-and-white illustrations nicely further the story. No accidental work of genius, thisDetorie's carefully crafted novel is an engaging experience.(Fiction. 10-14)]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
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