
Reach for this book when your teen is struggling with perfectionism, feeling like a perpetual misfit, or wondering if their current blunders define their future. Chris Crutcher delivers a hilariously self-deprecating memoir about growing up in a small Idaho town, proving that childhood embarrassments are often the raw materials for a creative life. Parents will appreciate how Crutcher tackles the vulnerabilities of adolescence with refreshing honesty. It is an ideal pick for showing teens that even the most 'ill-advised' choices can lead to a successful, resilient adulthood. While it contains some mature language and adolescent high-jinks, its core message about finding your voice through failure is invaluable.
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Sign in to write a reviewCrutcher reflects on the prejudices present in his small hometown.
Exploration of anxiety, fear of failure, and family tension.
The book addresses family dysfunction, specifically a father with a volatile temper, in a direct and realistic manner. It also touches on racism and bullying within a small-town context. The approach is secular and highly grounded in psychological realism, ending on a hopeful note of self-actualization.
A 14-year-old boy who plays sports but feels like he doesn't quite fit the 'jock' mold, or any teen writer who needs to see that 'flaws' are actually 'features' of a creative mind.
Parents should be aware of some frank discussions of bodily functions and occasional strong language (consistent with Crutcher's other YA work). Preview the chapter on his father's anger if the child is sensitive to domestic tension. A parent might see their child being overly self-critical after a failure or feeling like they are the only ones who 'don't get it' socially.
Younger teens will focus on the slapstick humor and the 'gross-out' stories. Older teens will resonate more with the themes of identity formation and the realization that adults are just as flawed as kids.
Unlike many 'triumph' memoirs, Crutcher refuses to polish his past. He remains the 'King of the Mild Frontier' by celebrating the small, unglamorous, and often humiliating moments of life.
This is a series of interconnected autobiographical essays detailing Chris Crutcher's upbringing in Cascade, Idaho. It follows his journey from a sensitive, often terrified child to a competitive athlete and eventually a renowned YA author. The narrative focuses on key formative moments, ranging from bathroom mishaps and sibling rivalries to the more serious impacts of his father's temper and his own developing sense of social justice.
This overview was generated by AI based on the book's content and reviews, and may not capture every nuance.