Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Romance


We kiss like it's a form of clasping.

Rachel Cohn and David Levithan's Nick & Norah's Infinite Playlist is infinitely better than the movie version by the same name. The book alternates between his and her points of view and explores what happens when two people somehow manage to connect. Really connect. The conversation between them is at times flirtatious, witty, angry and loving. They spend one of those magical nights together where you can just be 18 and young and walking around all night, discovering each other.

The language is lovely (Nick reads the sentences behind her eyes, Norah has fallen into the darkness of the consumed) but funny, funny, funny at the same time. If Nick and Norah were real people I would hope I could be cool enough to be their friends. I have to admit, I was never the kind of kid who could have pulled off playing at punk clubs in Manhattan or knowing where the best bands would play unadvertised concerts to intimate audiences at 3am, when the rest of the city was shutting down for the night. Part of Nick and Norah's charm though is the fact that they can be cutting edge but they're cool with everyone (gay, straight, bi, trans).

This book is great for the woman or man interested in the romantic aspect because it really rings true and resonates on that level (this is the night everyone wishes they could have with the one person out there who makes them laugh and really gets them in a way nobody else does). But it's more than that; the book is political and snarky and funny and discusses everything from Israel to the Beatles. Highly recommended for readers 16-18. Mature themes and language.

The details: Cohn, Rachel and David Levithan. Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2006.

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