Ratings22
Average rating4.2
I encountered this book by extreme chance. I was in the library looking for something to read and I saw this. I read the first few pages, and just knew I had to get my hands on it.
This is a book that changes lives. It changes your way of thinking about daily things as well as how you view children. Children are amazing individuals who have the ability to imagine many things and so many people take them for granted.
The diction in the book is absolutely exquisite. Budo, the narrator, speaks likes he's way beyond his years, but his language and phrasing is that of a child. Somehow it works, it's beautiful and you wish you could write even a smidge as well as Matthew Green.
The characters are so well-written that sometimes you forget the main characters are actually children. They are well-rounded and mature wonderfully over the novel that you can't help but love them. Each character has a personality and story to tell.
It was interesting to see that Max has Asperger's Syndrome (if I read the symptoms correctly.). These kinds of disorders are rarely found in novels, and if they are, it's not approached in the right manner. In Memoirs of an Imaginary Friend, it's approached in a personal manner, which is always pleasant to read as I can relate to the autistic spectrum.
Memoirs of an Imaginary Friend is not just a story about a boy and his imaginary friend. It's a story about sacrifice and commitment and friendship and bravery. It's all the little things that shine through moments that make you wipe your eyes and thrust your fist in the air and everything in between.
This book is filled with good and bad parts. It's filled with parts that touch your heart and parts that make you shiver when you realise how smart kids actually are. This book is not about a child. It's about how a person can be brave.