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Jake, Reinvented

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
New kid Jake Garrett seems to have it all figured out. He's a star athlete, he hosts the best parties, and every girl in school wants to date him. But who is Jake Garrett, really? And why has he gone to all the trouble to reinvent himself? Gordon Korman's brilliant and intense writing and cutting edge dialogue quickly draw readers into the adolescent struggle of popularity and acceptance.
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  • Reviews

    • AudioFile Magazine
      Korman taps into teens' desires to be accepted and to reinvent themselves. Jake Garrett has the right clothes, car, and parties, to which everyone is invited, and he uses them all to try to get the girl of his dreams. When his triumph leads to tragedy, Jake is forced on the outside again. Jim Colby is a good match to portray teenagers on the cusp of adulthood. He narrates the social scenes with finesse, and his character differentiation is solid. Colby gives the story's narrator a more neutral tone as it is Rick's purpose to act as observer. This treatment makes the more dramatic characters stand out. J.M.S. (c) AudioFile 2006, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      October 6, 2003
      Dedicated to "Jay and Daisy," Korman's (Maxx Comedy: The Funniest Kid in America
      ) smart novel imagines The Great Gatsby
      with a cast of characters from Fitzgerald High. The Jay Gatsby figure is nerd turned bon vivant Jake Garrett; Daisy Buchanan has become Didi, the impossibly beautiful girl who is dating Todd Buckley (i.e., Tom Buchanan) despite his infidelities. Jake's weekly parties escalate in size and intensity, all part of his plan to get closer to Didi, whom he tutored in math several years before at a different school and has idealized ever since. In the midst of the banality and posturing of one keg party after another, two mature characters emerge: narrator Rick Paradis, who seems to not fit in with the crowd from the beginning, and the remarkable Dipsy, who starts off as comic relief but turns out to be perhaps the wisest person in the book: he alone understands that high school is, after all, just a few years, and that there is much more of life to come. Korman's prose hits its mark: a hung-over bunch of football players becomes "statuary in shoulder pads," the noise at a party rises "up to the point of pain" and the mournful hero is "unmade, not by fire, but by cold, smooth indifference." Unfortunately, a final chapter tacks on a happy ending and somewhat dulls the story's impact. Ages 12-up.

Formats

  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

Languages

  • English

Levels

  • Lexile® Measure:800
  • Text Difficulty:3-4

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