Gr 8 Up—Ethan Andrezejczak is a junior at a Minnesota arts school that is hosting a competitive "reality" television show starring its students. Ethan strikes just the right note of teenage hesitancy and the shrug of paralyzed inaction so common to many stalled in the years leading to adulthood. Ethan tells the story about how he wound up attending the school, with his limited talent at drawing and music. His friends consist of the truly talented writer Luke, brainy Jackson, and stylishly dreadlocked Elizabeth. When their inspiring English teacher introduces them to Ezra Pound's
Cantos, Luke composes a long poem that voices his outcry against the corrupting influence of the sleazy TV people capitalizing on their school's art and integrity. He pulls his friends into clandestine raids on the school's printing press and distributes his protest poem to the student body. Being a part of the reality show rebellion energizes Ethan, even though his crush, ballerina Maura, is one of the leading contestants. The group discovers just how deeply the school administration is in league with the show's producers, and a surprising betrayal leaves Ethan bewildered with little solace beyond the distractions of his zany preschool triplet sisters and a sickly gerbil that does tricks. With a quirky cast of characters set against a reality television invasion, the ample humor and realistic angst make this an enjoyable story.—
Suzanne Gordon, Lanier High School, Sugar Hill, GAWhen teen reality show For Art's Sake comes to Ethan's bohemian high school, his charismatic best friend Luke proposes a "folk uprising": a scathing long poem, inspired by Ezra Pound, distributed to the student body through guerilla tactics. But the poem lands Luke a spot on the show (his apparent objective all along). Ethan's self-deprecating and witty voice makes him an appealing narrator.
Ethan doesn't mind too much when For Art's Sake, a reality show on which select students compete for the title of "America's Best Teen Artist," comes to his bohemian high school. His charismatic best friend Luke, however, proclaims "Selwyn sold out" and proposes a "folk uprising." Luke, Ethan, and their buddies Jackson and Elizabeth execute Luke's master plan: a scathing long poem, inspired by their English class unit on Ezra Pound, published and distributed to the student body through guerilla tactics. Typically go-along-to-get-along Ethan gets fired up by Luke's idealism (and the show's exploitation of dancer contestant Maura, his longtime crush), so he feels profoundly betrayed when their poem lands Luke a spot on For Art's Sake...Luke's apparent objective all along. Ethan, Jackson, and Elizabeth hatch another wacky plan to take down the show on its live season finale, expose the school's dirty administration, reward talent over marketability, and (hopefully) make Luke see the error of his ways. Ethan's voice -- self-deprecating, witty, and full of references to literary devices and masterworks as well as pop culture (if occasionally too self-consciously so) -- makes him an appealing narrator for this madcap comedy, and one readers will cheer as he finds the courage to take a leading role in his own life. katie bircher
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