FICTION

Denton Little's Deathdate

352p. Knopf. Apr. 2015. Tr $17.99. ISBN 9780553496963; lib. ed. $20.99. ISBN 9780553496970; ebk. ISBN 9780553496987.
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Gr 9 Up—In a not-so-distant future, every person knows from tests performed on hair and blood at birth what day he or she will die. As the book begins, Denton knows that tomorrow is his deathdate and he is as ready as a person can be in this rather weird situation. His family has planned the funeral and the "sitting," the wait for death to come. Denton attends the funeral, but as far as the sitting, he has other plans—time with his friends and girlfriends, some alcohol, smoking pot, sex—much better ways of spending his last day of Earth than just waiting. Then there is this strange purple rash with red dots that is spreading over his body, as well as the bodies of the people he has exchanged "spit" with—and the numerous near misses of his death when he's almost hit by a car (twice) and is nearly shot. Denton's deathdate gets stranger and stranger. This humorous story of mortality, friendship, family, and secrets is a strange, fun, and unusual read that keeps readers laughing, gasping, and quickly turning pages. Denton, a likable and well-rounded character, just can't keep from getting in trouble—his hookup with his best friend's sister has made his girlfriend mad, his girlfriend's ex keeps trying to kill him—as does the neighborhood drug dealer—and everything he does seems to cause a problem. The plot is quirky and highly original. Denton Little just can't win—but readers certainly do. While this seems to be a stand-alone novel, and a satisfying one at that, there is plenty of fodder for a sequel. Rubin's is a new voice on the YA literature scene and is well-worth reading.—Janet Hilbun, University of North Texas
In seventeen-year-old Denton's world, AstroThanatoGenetics makes it possible to find out the date of a person's death at birth, though not the exact moment and cause. Denton spends his deathdate, which happens to be the day of his senior prom, wondering how he'll go. There's dark humor in spades here, along with fully developed relationships and a mystery that will keep pages turning.
In seventeen-year-old Denton's world, AstroThanatoGenetics makes it possible -- and the U.S. government makes it mandatory -- to find out the date of a person's death at the time of his or her birth, though the exact moment and cause of death remain a surprise. Funerals take place the day before death and end in dance parties, and many families spend deathdates in "Sittings" while they wait for whatever will befall their loved ones. Denton, an "Early" (because his deathdate is before age twenty-one), is still wrestling with the usual adolescent confusion as his fate approaches and in fact wakes up the morning of his funeral in his best friend's sister's bed, unsure of whether he's cheated on his girlfriend. (Not a spoiler: he has.) He spends his deathdate, which happens to be the day of his senior prom, wondering how he'll go; his mysterious purple rash may provide a hint, but so might a brawl with a gun-wielding rival and several encounters with a strung-out driver. There's dark humor in spades here, along with fully developed relationships and a mystery that will keep readers turning pages while Denton receives strange messages and enters and leaves his own Sitting far more times than his family expects. A surprisingly breezy read, both for its hilarity and for its gradually revealed secrets. Some questions are left unanswered, but -- not to give too much away -- the story does not appear to be over. shoshana flax

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