December 13, 2007...4:04 am

Hooray for YouTube

Jump to Comments

YouTube joint-account-users vlogbrothers are brothers in real life who vlog (video-blog) to each other almost every day because they live in different states. One brother, John Green, has a book. It’s called An Abundance of Katherines.

Hooray for YouTube because it helped me find the book. Which sounds cheesily nerdy. Which means that it tries very hard to be nerdy in the way that is cool to be nerdy these days.

Fortunately, I’m man enough to admit that I like cheesy-nerdy – cheesy as it is. So I absolutely cannot wait to read it. Maybe I can get the library to order it in or something because I am almost definitely sure most places don’t have it.

Also, I’d love to read his other book, Looking For Alaska.

Here’s a review found on the Amazon site that exemplifies why I’d classify this book contemporary nerdy (which is cheesy-nerdy said in a less cheesy way):

Grade 9 Up–This novel is not as issue-oriented as Greens Looking for Alaska (Dutton, 2005), though it does challenge readers with its nod to postmodern structure. Right after intellectual child-prodigy Colin Singleton graduates from high school, his girlfriend (who, like the 18 young women and girls whom he claimed as girlfriends over the years, is named Katherine) breaks up with him and sends him into a total funk. His best friend, Hassan, determines that he can only be cured with a road trip. After some rather aimless driving, the two find themselves in Gutshot, TN, where locals persuade them to stay. There, Colin spends his spare time working on a mathematical theorem of love, hypothesizing that romantic relationships can be graphed and predicted. The narrative is self-consciously dorky, peppered with anagrams, trivia, and foreign-language bons mots and interrupted by footnotes that explain, translate, and expound upon the text in the form of asides. It is this type of mannered nerdiness that has the potential to both win over and alienate readers. As usual, Greens primary and secondary characters are given descriptive attention and are fully and humorously realized. While enjoyable, witty, and even charming, a book with an appendix that describes how the mathematical functions in the novel can be created and graphed is not for everybody. The readers who do embrace this book, however, will do so wholeheartedly.–Amy S. Pattee, Simmons College, Boston

Leave a Reply