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BookDragon Blog

18 Dec / Turtles All the Way Down by John Green [in School Library Journal]

With her name, Aza’s dad bestowed her with possibility: “It spans the whole alphabet, because we wanted to let you know you can be anything.” Davis’s father “made [him] a junior. Resigned [him] to juniority.” The two teens have little in common – Davis is absurdly rich and lives in a staffed mansion, Aza is unsure how her mother will pay for college – but they share a brief past that overlapped at 11. They’ve also both lost fathers: Aza’s is dead, Davis’s is missing.

Reunited when Aza and BFF Daisy trespass onto Davis’s compound, Daisy is the first to declare “IT IS TRUE LOVE.” Roadblocks are plenty (tidy endings are never a Green guarantee): Aza battles a debilitating fear of deadly bacteria that makes basic interactions challenging, Daisy has secrets she’s willing to sell, Davis’s brother Noah is not-so-slowly falling apart, and if the worst happens, a tuatara billionaire will become a thing.

Narrator Kate Rudd takes Green’s twisty, turny dramas in stride, crafting individuals – nerves for Aza, resignation for Davis, bouncing energy for Daisy, neediness for Noah – to create a resonating, unforgettable ensemble.

Verdict: Any new Green title means instant bestseller; in preparation, libraries should acquire multiple copies in all formats.

Review: “DVDs and Audio,” School Library Journal, December 1, 2017

Readers: Young Adult

Published: 2017

By Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Center in Audio, Fiction, Nonethnic-specific, Repost, Young Adult Readers Tags > BookDragon, Death, Family, Friendship, John Green, Love, Mental Illness, Parent/child relationship, School Library Journal, Siblings, Turtles All the Way Down
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