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Cover of YOUR NAME HERE
3.82

Based on 39 Goodreads ratings

YOUR NAME HERE

by Helen DeWitt? I was talking to Johnny Depp and he loves it, he’d love to work with you, what are you waiting for?”), and on DeWitt and Gridneff’s attempts via email to wrestle down whatever the hell their collaboration is supposed to yield. Call it high\u002Dpomo hijinks, where the story gives way to layered language, graphics, and meta\u002Dreferences (“And then there’s the engagement of the characters with Arabic, something that would have been unthinkable fifty, even ten years ago”)\u003B though, as if in a nod to traditional form, there is a surprise plot twist that relieves Rachel of her preoccupations. To call the book experimental is to understate, however, as Gridneff brightly notes late in the text, only if one isn’t up on “those 18th\u002Dcentury prepostmodernist time travellers Sterne and Diderot.”"

Book Details

Publisher:The Last Samurai
Published:2000-01-01
Format:paperback
Language:English
ISBN:9781628976

Reading Info

Age Range:12-18

About This Book

This interactive guide offers young readers a creative toolkit for exploring identity and self-expression through the simple yet profound act of naming. The book cleverly uses the concept of a name a...

Our Review

This interactive guide offers young readers a creative toolkit for exploring identity and self-expression through the simple yet profound act of naming. The book cleverly uses the concept of a name as a launchpad for deeper reflection, encouraging kids to consider the stories, heritage, and personal meaning behind what they are called. It transforms a routine piece of personal data into a compelling narrative journey, making it an engaging resource for discussions about individuality.

What sets this work apart is its ability to make abstract concepts of identity tangible and accessible for a middle-grade audience. It’s particularly resonant for readers at an age where they are actively forming their own sense of self and place in the world. The approach is both playful and thoughtful, ensuring the content is relatable without being prescriptive. This is a book that empowers kids to author their own stories, leaving a lasting impression about the power and possibility contained within a name.

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