I’m trying to imagine the pitch for this book: We have a
teenage narrator who is obsessed by film. But not current or popular films.
Film school films. Obscure films. In fact, a major role in this book will be
occupied by German filmmaker Werner Herzog’s 1972 cult classic Aguirre, the Wrath of God. Our narrator
and his angry friend will remake it. Oh, and the third main character is a girl
with leukemia. And the book has lots of profanity.
Author Jesse Andrews calls Me and Earl and the Dying Girl a “weird little book.” It is. But it works wonder with its weirdness.
“You can pretty much take any sentence in this book and if
you read it enough times, you will probably end up committing a homicide.” This is the voice of Greg Gaines, the
“Me” in Jesse Andrews’ Me and Earl and
the Dying Girl. And what a narrative voice it is—profane, witty,
self-deprecating. Speaking of profane, the “Earl” of the title is Earl Jackson,
Greg’s best (only?) friend, and the poet laureate of profanity. Earl and Greg
make films together: Earl to escape his home life (he lives in squalor and his
family puts the “diss” in dysfunction) and Greg to escape himself, though he is
not self-aware enough through most of the book to realize this.
Greg’s theory about surviving high school involves hiding in
plain sight—acquaintance with all groups, friends with none. This is where
Rachel comes in. The Dying Girl. Greg originally spends time with Rachel only
to mollify his mother, but his relationship with Rachel starts to affect his
overall social invisibility.
Like the protagonists in John Green’s The Fault in Our Stars, Rachel is neither a saint nor a
stereotypical “Cancer Teen.” Her passivity in the face of her illness at times
infuriates Greg. And the “lesson” is more nuanced
than, say, a Lurlene McDaniel book. Me
and Earl and the Dying Girl is likely to be lumped in with TFIOS. Understandably, as both share a
subject matter and a snarky tone that helps mitigate the treacle factor that
stalks such a topic.
Andrews uses multiple narrative techniques to propel the
story and construct Greg’s unique voice. Foremost among these is screenplay
format, which, given the role film plays in Greg’s life, seems organic rather
than gimmicky. Bullet points, interior monologue, and newspaper headlines also
feature. Greg is the funniest young adult narrator I have encountered in some
time; I think teen boys will respond similarly (that may say something about my
maturity level).
3 comments :
I enjoyed Herzog's Aguirre, The Wrath of God, so I'm really curious to give this book a read. I want to know how the teens remake the movie, since it wasn't an easy film to make int he first place.
I loved this book. Rather than gush again, here is a link to my blog post from April of this year: http://arepreading.tumblr.com/post/21026245681/meandearl.
Me and Earl and the Dying Girl was absolutely the funniest YA novel I have ever read.
This book, it's a winner.
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