Reviews

Punkzilla by Adam Rapp

lazygal's review against another edition

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5.0

Jamie, aka Punzilla, tells his story in a series of letters to his brother, P. 'zilla's a runaway (from his family and from the military academy), living in Portland when he hears that P has cancer - and has given him $200 to get to Memphis before he dies. Most of the letters are about 'zilla's journey to his brother, but they're also about his journey away from his family and his experiences in military school. Every so often there's a letter from someone (mom, dad, Other Brother), but the voice is almost purely Jamie's monologue to his older brother.

The people he meets and the experiences he has are so clearly drawn you feel as though you've also met (or done) them. I think boys will really like this book and can't wait to introduce it to them!

sumayyah_t's review against another edition

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5.0

Excellent book! The story, told in letters, of a 14 year old boy known as Punkzilla. The adventure begins on a Greyhound bus as Punkzilla is headed to see his big bother who is dying of cancer. It chronicles the people he meets, the things he experiences, plus flashbacks and explanations of the past. This book is rated for TEEN reading, but I would recommend it for anyone who wants to learn about life.

renatasnacks's review against another edition

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4.0

Good Ellen Hopkins readalike. This is hardcore and deals with a cornucopia of issues--drugs, sex, prostitution, cancer, transgender individuals, etc...--but the protagonist, Punkzilla, is kind of a sweet kid at his core and a cool narrator.

Not tween friendly, but an engaging and moving read for mature teens.

khamz's review against another edition

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dark emotional funny reflective sad medium-paced

4.0

nerfherder86's review against another edition

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3.0

14 year old Jamie runs away from military school and lives in shelters and on the streets of Portland, but then travels to Memphis on his own to try to get to his dying older brother's bedside. As he journeys on a bus (and ends up hitchhiking too) he writes a letter-journal to his brother about the many people he meets along the way. He also reveals why he was sent to military school (his father is very strict and was finally fed up with his many petty crimes and acting out) and what has happened to him since his brother left home years ago to move in with his boyfriend. A very dark book, with gritty realistic events like getting mugged and almost getting abused by lowlife creeps in motels. Jamie used drugs and there are references to blow jobs, etc. This one is definitely for mature high school readers. It is written in stream-of-consciousness style, since Jamie is not really a writer and just records his thoughts as they come to him; plus he is ADD and off his meds! Takes some getting used to reading this. Not really my kind of book, but the Printz committee certainly liked it, and it is kind of compulsive reading--you just want to see how it turns out for Jamie.

nematome's review against another edition

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4.0

I’d basically like to hold this up to all those people in camp “YA has abandoned boys” as an example of how YA has…you know…not abandoned boys. Of course, that might be problematic because I’m pretty sure that that particular camp shares a lot of members with camp “YA is too dark.” And this book is plenty o’ dark. Or at least, it certainly contains the hallmarks of what those lovely campers like to label as “dark”. This book contains drug use, violence, sex, parental abandonment, cancer, and a very realistic portrayal of what life is like for a runaway teen. I honestly kept putting down my kindle every few chapters while reading this and thinking – is this really YA? But yes, the silver embossed P on the front assures me that it is. I think what astonished me the most about this book is how positive it is – even with all of those “dark” themes – this book feels hopeful and sweet.

Too often I find that books featuring “troubled boys” are not about troubled boys at all. They’re about boys who are kind and gentle and good and oh, if the world could only see things from their point of view then they wouldn’t be so misunderstood and blah blah blah – it’s as if there’s this belief that genuinely violent, troubled boys are not deserving of sympathy. I think it was incredibly brave of Adam Rapp to give us a boy who does live rough, use drugs, and who has (like pretty much all of us) not escaped his childhood without real scars. He has been discarded by his parents, abused and misused, and he survives by committing acts of violence. He is that boy that so many in our society would spare one glance to and summarily label completely beyond redemption.

I was surprised by how attached I became to Jamie (Punkzilla to his friends). On the surface he’s a fourteen year old uneducated, violent thug coming down from his first meth hit, on a greyhound bus trying to get to his older brother. Perhaps he’s a bit of that under the surface as well. But just like every uneducated, violent thug out there, he is more than just a collection of his worst attributes, and this book really challenges the reader to sympathize with him. And that is why this book is so powerful to me – it rings so true. Maybe there are one or two people out there who are just one hundred percent evil with no redeeming qualities, but I think that most of us have layers. Jamie is also insecure and intelligent and lonely and compassionate and a very loyal brother.

I also was really blown away by Adam Rapp’s writing. It’s bright and messy and fluid. He captures the voice of fourteen year old Jamie perfectly in letters – they’re cluttered and painfully honest, full of Jamie’s bravado in the face of terrifying circumstances and the fear and grief that he can’t quite cover up. Through letters from Jamie, Jamie’s parents, his brother, friends, and military school teachers, Adam Rapp gives us a very panoramic view of Jamie’s life and circumstances. I was held by this book from beginning to end.

Perfect Musical Pairing

The National – Bloodbuzz Ohio

This was actually one from Noelle’s playlist last month, and it’s also one of my favorite songs from The National. (I’m still hoping there’s a zombie book that I can assign this one to someday!) Maybe I’m interpreting the lyrics incorrectly, but to me this song is about drug-fueled nostalgia. The speaker is taken back to memories of his hometown, but they aren’t happy ones: “I never thought about love when I thought about home.”

Also seen at The Readventurer.

lemon_drop's review against another edition

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2.0

Blunt, Raw, Troubled, striving to be a "The Catcher in the Rye" of the current generation. I'm still letting it settle in my head...

mikeycade's review against another edition

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3.0

Good but not great. definitely something I think younger people need to read at 12-14 for some life lessons.

thebooksupplier's review against another edition

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4.0

Book preview at the (book) supplier: http://wp.me/p1D93k-rC

andreapoulain's review against another edition

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5.0

https://www.neapoulain.com/2018/11/punkzilla-adam-rapp-resena.html

Creí que este libro no me iba a encantar. La curiosidad por él me empezó en febrero, cuando oí a un compañero recomendárselo a varias personas en una feria del libro. Luego me olvidé de él por un tiempo, porque no era un libro que planeara comprar realmente, hasta que empezó la FILIJ. Ahí lo leí, porque se presentó la oportunidad. Para este entonces, ya me había spoileado el libro entero (advertencia, si alguna vez son staff de feria del libro, acostúmbrense a la idea de que muchos libros se los van a spoilear de cabo a rabo), pero aún así quería ver qué demonios tenía para ofrecer. Un compañero había dicho que le recordaba lejanamente a la generación beat, pero para jóvenes. Y sí. me recuerda a eso. También me recuerda un poco a la forma de narrar de Holden Caulfield en El guardián en el centeno (un libro que yo personalmente amo, porque lo leí con todo el slang en inglés y porque empatice con el irritante de Holden, pero que entiendo que muchas personas se les hace pesado), sólo que con menos cosas irritantes en cuestión de protagonista. Pero bueno, vamos a hablar por partes de la novela

En una reseña en goodreads, leí que este libro era la prueba de que el YA no había abandonado a los chicos, que nunca los iba a abandonar. Hay una extraña tendencia a creer que el YA de hoy en día se dirige sólo a las chicas y no. En la entrada pasada ya ahondé como la literatura no es para chicas o para chicos, sino que es para todos. Y este libro, sobre todo, presenta la masculinidad y a los jóvenes, algo increíble. Punkzilla es un adolescente de catorce años que huyó de un colegio militar, que critica duramente a Bush y a lo conservador de su padre (y de su familia en general). Va en busca de su hermano enfermo, que salió del closet hace años y huyó de casa, que escribe obras de teatro y vive en Memphis con su novio. Mientras va viajando, de Portland a donde está su hermano, escribe cartas.

La historia, pues, nos llega a través de las cartas que Punkzilla le escribe a su hermano, con su particular forma de escribir, los hechos que decide narrarnos y, lo que adivino que es mucho slang. Adivino porque si algo hizo a este libro es la traducción. Donde El guardián en el centeno pierde, para mí, parte de su encanto (la traducción que empecé a leer nunca fue de mis favoritas y me hizo buscar el libro en inglés), este la gana. La traducción del libro en español, publicado por el Fondo de Cultura Económica, corrió a cargo de la escritora Raquel Castro (a quien en este blog recordamos por Ojos llenos de sombra) y es una traducción que hizo al libro. Es preciosa. Se puede notar es esfuerzo de mantener la voz de los personajes, a la vez que el esfuerzo por traducirlo para, sobre todo, la juventud mexicana.

Entremezcladas con las cartas de Punkzilla, hay algunas respuestas de su hermano y algunas cartas del pasado, de sus padres o su otro hermano mientras está en la academia militar. Hay una, escrita por el protagonista, mientras aun está interno, dirigida a su madre, que me encanta. Escribe la carta y vomita todo lo que siente en ella y al final dice que la acaba de releer, que no la va a enviar, que antes la quema. Como si no quisiera reconocerse vulnerable ante su madre, pero es algo que los lectores podemos ver, esa vulnerabilidad tan obvia de Punkzilla, por más que se quiera hacer el fuerte mientras cruza el país y huye de su casa y se enoja porque se ve como chica y lo ven como chica y repite que le dicen Punkzilla. Esa parte del libro me encantó, porque es además un rasgo que se va repitiendo escondido por las cartas, mientras cuenta su ineptitud en la escuela militar y le pide a su hermano que no se muera.

Además, en el libro hay una obvia crítica a las escuelas militares en los Estados Unidos, lo que les hace a los jóvenes y lo que representa. Hay una crítica a los gobiernos conservadores y, en general, a las familias conservadoras. Hay un resentimiento muy grande cuando el protagonista se refiere a su familia, porque lo mandaron a una escuela militar para "corregirlo" y porque practicamente obligaron a su hermano a huir de su casa.

La verdad Punkzilla es un libro que recomiendo mucho, de verdad. Me gustó mucho más de lo que esperaba, porque en un principio, ni la portada ni la presentación me llamaban la atención (hasta que oí a alguien recomendarlo). Así que por eso, también quiero recomendárselos a ustedes. Es un libro juvenil con estilo fresco, que ofrece una historia increíble y quizá pueda ser incluso considerado un coming-of-age narrado de manera increíble. No se lo pierdan. Es uno de los títulos de la colección A través del espejo del Fondo de Cultura Económica, la colección que le está apostando a la literatura juvenil.