boy meets boy by david levithan

“GUESS WHAT!” I said. She jumped, then tried to pretend she hadn’t been surprised. Since she didn’t closer her book-she only marked the page with her finger-I knew I didn’t have mch time.

“What?” she asked.
“I’m gay!”

Paul, a sophmore at a school where the cheerleaders ride motorcycles and the homecoming queen is also the football star, has it easy. He knows who he is. He knows how to deal with it. His family is accepting, he has good friends, and his life is generally pretty good.
It gets better.
When Paul meets Noah, they know they’re meant to be. Immediately they get together, and they think they’re destined for each other. Sure, Paul is going through a tough time…
But even with an ex boyfriend of Paul’s, who won’t seem to go away; Paul’s best friend, Joni, who’s dating a jerk and who might not be Paul’s best friend anymore; His other best friend, Tony, who’s having trouble at home; and all the rest of his friends’ problems, they think they can muddle through.
Until Paul blows it, big time.
But maybe, just maybe, everything has to fall apart, before it can get back together.
Paul can hope, anyway.

“Oh, honey,” she says when I’m done with my wallowing. “It’s like my grandma used to say: Just when you think life’s got you in a gutter, a tornado will come along and destroy your house.”
“And then you rebuild?” I ask.
“Well, she never mentioned that part, but I suppose it could happen.”
I am not cheered up.

This is definitely not the type of book I regularly read. First of all, it’s a romance. Second of all, it’s a YA romance. Thirdly, it’s a YA gay romance.
But hey.
You gotta try new things, right?
Keeping that in mind…

I really liked this book. A lot. It was very funny, and very well written. I was having “cute spasms” (basically where I get so overwhelmed with the cute content that I freak out and can’t do anything) the entire length of this book. The characters were well developed, interesting, original, and fascinating. Even though a lot of the conflict didn’t happen until about half way through the book, I still found myself wanting to read on, just because I cared about what happened to them.

The plot was interesting… Though you could definitely tell it was a YA book… In hindsight, a lot of the things that happened seem very formulated, but reading it, it was intriguing.

I really liked this book, and I’d recommend it to anyone who just wants something slightly different to read. 🙂

“So what’s up with you?” I ask.
“Not much.”
“And how are things?”
“Fine.”
RRRRRRRRR. I make a loud game-show-buzzer noise. “I’m sorry,” I say, “we don’t recognize ‘fine’ as an acceptable answer. We see it as a conversational cop-out. So please, try again.”