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October: The Female of the Species by Mindy McGinnis
By Jenna · 7 posts · 145 views
By Jenna · 7 posts · 145 views
last updated Jan 20, 2017 08:21PM
What Members Thought

Jan 27, 2017
Crowinator
rated it
really liked it
Shelves:
genre-contemporary,
queer,
ya,
a-good-cry,
school-hard,
2017-reads,
favorites-2017,
ra-ya-queer
Classic first line: "Life is bullshit." I loved this book. More review later.
Obvious read-alikes: (view spoiler)
Everybody Sees the Ants
Boy 21
Not-so-obvious read-alikes:(view spoiler)
Simon vs. the Homo Sapiens Agenda
Grasshopper Jungle
Highly Illogical Behavior
More Than This ...more
Obvious read-alikes: (view spoiler)
Everybody Sees the Ants
Boy 21
Not-so-obvious read-alikes:(view spoiler)
Simon vs. the Homo Sapiens Agenda
Grasshopper Jungle
Highly Illogical Behavior
More Than This ...more

Mar 15, 2016
Barbara
rated it
really liked it
Shelves:
alcohol,
names,
resilience,
animals,
depression,
elderly-characters,
teachers,
science-fiction,
community,
death
This impressive title from the author of The Deathday Letter, fml, and The Five Stages of Andrew Brawley really shows his writing chops and elevates his craft considerably in his latest title. Having recently lost the love of his life, Jesse, to suicide, for reasons he desperately wants to learn, Henry Denton's barely making it through each day. Teased, bullied, and saddled with "Space Boy" as a nickname, he finds little joy in life and hides how difficult things are from his mother since she ne
...more

At first, I was enthralled by Henry's voice. It made me think of an Andrew Smith character. Smart, check. Funny, check. Aliens, check! And I think that originality stuck with me even as the plot insisted on trudging down the road of predictable romance. Not that I'm knocking the slow burn of Henry and Diego's relationship because that kind of tension is a teen reader magnet. But as an oldster, it struck me as a bit head-smacking.
Towards the end, my original enthusiasm was thoroughly tamed by th ...more
Towards the end, my original enthusiasm was thoroughly tamed by th ...more

Henry Denton doesn't see much reason to save the world. Abandoned by the boy he loves, brutally bullied by classmates and his older brother, abducted by aliens and then returned, days later, without pants... When the aliens give him the opportunity to determine the fate of humanity, he sees a whole lot of pros for letting the world end and not a lot in favor of "pushing the button" and saving it. This book chronicles Henry's last 144 days before the "end date", while Henry struggles to find a re
...more

3.5 stars. Some originality, but again and again I felt like I had just read this story, these types, this conflict. Diego was a interesting character, and the heart of the story is both simpler and more complex that the storyline would have you believe. But it just seems to me that this is the new normal in books with main characters who are gay: not a coming out story, but a "dealing with the doldrums and ridiculously cruel and transparent bullies of high school" story. Do teens (both gay and
...more

I'm not sure why I think this is such a good book, despite its problems. For one, it never answers at least three of its central questions.
I can live with that.
But how could the teachers and parents in Henry's life ignore the obvious physical abuse that Henry suffers? How??
That said, I loved the chapters positing different ways the world might end. And the characters really came to life.
So much angst! ...more
I can live with that.
But how could the teachers and parents in Henry's life ignore the obvious physical abuse that Henry suffers? How??
That said, I loved the chapters positing different ways the world might end. And the characters really came to life.
So much angst! ...more

There's not really anything wrong with this book: I had to put it aside when other reading responsibilities came up, and I realized after a while that I didn't have a strong pull to pick it back up again. I personally didn't think that the book did much that was new or interesting, beyond the alien abduction subplot, but I my bigger issue was just lack of time, and also maybe that I've read a bunch of depression books lately and am a little burnt out. I did have a strong affection for the main c
...more

Ah-mazeballs.

Somewhere between 3 1/2 and 4 stars. A little long. Kept me nvolved on vacation, but felt like something could have been cut out. Were the aliens all in his head? I don't think this is a spoiler, since I honestly don't know, and at this point, the book is already set in the past. Liked the dark hypothetical earth ending scenarios. No way a story this long could have been turned in to a teacher, or maybe I misunderstood that part of the ending?
...more

Quote:
"We have to watch Nana's life slipping away from her like a forgotten word. I thought I understood what's happening to her, but this isn't like being robbed a penny at a time. Memories aren't currency to spend; they're us. Age isn't stealing from my grandmother; it's slowly unwinding her." (p. 175) ...more
"We have to watch Nana's life slipping away from her like a forgotten word. I thought I understood what's happening to her, but this isn't like being robbed a penny at a time. Memories aren't currency to spend; they're us. Age isn't stealing from my grandmother; it's slowly unwinding her." (p. 175) ...more

Nov 23, 2015
Denise
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Jan 20, 2016
Liz
marked it as to-read

Mar 01, 2016
Jan
marked it as to-read

Mar 04, 2016
Donalyn
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Mar 29, 2016
Emily Ashley Haberman
marked it as to-read

Jun 19, 2016
Kathy
marked it as to-read