TITLE: The Other Normals AUTHOR: Ned Vizzini PUB: Balzer+Bray PUB DATE: 9/25/12 FORMAT: pb ARC SOURCE: pub |
Given the chance, fifteen-year-old Peregrine “Perry” Eckert would dedicate every waking moment to Creatures & Caverns, an epic role-playing game rich with magical creatures, spell casting, and deadly weapons. The world of C&C is where he feels most comfortable in his own skin, so when his parents ship him off to summer camp Perry is sure he’s in for the worst summer of his life. Everything changes, however, when Perry gets to camp and stumbles into the World of the Other Normals. Perry’s new otherworldly friends need his help to save their princess and prevent mass violence. As they embark on their quest together, Perry realizes that his nerdy childhood has uniquely prepared him to be a great warrior in this world, and maybe even a hero. Bestselling author Ned Vizzini delivers a compulsively readable and wildly original story about the winding and often hilarious path to manhood.
THREE
WORDS: Awkward Characters & Writing
MY
REVIEW: I'm a self-proclaimed
geek, nerd, queen of awkwardness, so when I read the synopsis to Ned
Vizzini's The Other Normals I
felt an instant connection to the main character Perry and I hoped
I'd find a kindred spirit in him...alas, I did not. I loved Vizzini's
other novel It's
Kind Of A Funny Story
and I think he can craft a stellar contemporary voice. Unfortunately,
this particular novel just didn't strike a chord with me.
Peregrine
“Perry” Eckert is by all definitions a loner, geek, late bloomer.
At 15 years old, he has no real friends, has never kissed a girl and
spends all his time playing Creatures & Caverns, a role-playing
game infused with magic and myth. He longs for the day when he can
put his C&C skills to work and be a real life hero, and when his
parents ship him off to summer camp he may just get his chance. While
at camp he discovers the World of the Other Normals where C&C
creatures are real. The Other Normals enlist Perry's help to save
their princess and world and Perry finally has the chance to be a
hero and maybe even make real friends.
The
Other Normals has
a great, fresh premise; Vizzini takes a well used plot (outsider
loner is transported into a fantasy world and must become a hero) and
taken it to some imaginative and unexpected places. Unfortunately,
the story, with its unlikable hero; awkward writing and all over the
place storyline just did not work for me.
At
400 pages, this is a longer read and I considered DNFing halfway
through because of the slow, meandering pace and baffling storyline,
but I pushed through, wanting to see how Perry's story ended. I
genuinely liked the fantasy world and grand adventure aspects of this
story. The world of the Other Normals is fantastical and intriguing,
but the world-building is often fragmented, overwhelming or
confusing. While fascinated by certain aspects of this fantasy world,
I didn't feel like I ever got a complete grasp of this world and its
history, people, cultures, etc.
I
think my biggest issue with this book is the main character, Perry. I
didn't find him very likable or relatable at all. Yes, he's smart,
exhibits a certain level of courage and thoughtfulness and clearly
has a difficult home life, but I found him incredibly immature for a
15 year old, tactless and his awkwardness is less endearing and more
eye-rolling. I had a really hard time liking Perry or rooting for
him. There's just something about his characterization that feels
forced and clunky. And so much of his dialogue and humor is flat or
stilted and many of his actions are perplexing...at one point he
pulls his pants down at a dance to show a girl his first and only
pubic hair to prove that he's a “man”...I may have never been a
15 year old boy, but I'm pretty sure this is not a normal reaction to
rejection, right?!
Many
of the other characters read like over the top cliches or
caricatures. There's also a bit of unnecessary and kind of offensive
racism going on in this book; both Perry and other campers often
point out that he's the only white kid at camp and refer to the camp
as “ghetto”.
Much
of the storyline feels jumbled and confusing. And perhaps being a
twenty-something female, I'm just not the right audience for this
book, but I didn't really “get” the humor, voice or style. The
only thing that kept me reading this book until the end, and the
reason it gets two cupcakes, is the character Ada. Ada, one of the
Other Normals, is the only character I actually liked and enjoyed.
Her humor is actually funny, her actions actually make sense and her
personality is actually likable.
MY
FINAL THOUGHTS: I really wanted to like The Other Normals but just never connected with the less than greatly executed story or unlikable characters. I just don't think I was the right audience for this particular book, but I have no doubt the right audience will get Vizzini's story and connect with Perry. And I may not be a fan of this book, but I will certainly continue to read Vizzini's work in the future.
MY RATING
Purchase: Amazon / B&N / Book Depository
Vizzini grew up primarily in the Park Slope neighborhood of Brooklyn in New York City. He attended Stuyvesant High School in Manhattan, graduating in 1999. While still a teenager, he began to write articles for the New York Press, an alternative newspaper.
After he wrote an essay that got published by the New York Times Magazine, several of his essays about his young adult life ended up being combined into his first book, Teen Angst? Naaah.... Vizzini attended Hunter College, also located in Manhattan. Ned Vizzini currently lives in New York City and continues to write and to speak about his books. Vizzini's characters and situations are said be based upon his time spent at Stuyvesant.
After he wrote an essay that got published by the New York Times Magazine, several of his essays about his young adult life ended up being combined into his first book, Teen Angst? Naaah.... Vizzini attended Hunter College, also located in Manhattan. Ned Vizzini currently lives in New York City and continues to write and to speak about his books. Vizzini's characters and situations are said be based upon his time spent at Stuyvesant.
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