Ratings24
Average rating3.2
In the last months of high school, charismatic eighteen-year-old Sutter Keely lives in the present, staying drunk or high most of the time, but that could change when starts working to boost the self-confidence of a classmate, Aimee.
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I loved it. This was the first book that touched and influenced me personally. I really could identify myself with Sutter. Not in the whole, but with many of his problems and thoughts. I could find something for myself in so many dialogues, it helped me to realize to be more open and confident.
I liked it, but I hated the ending.
I kept waiting for him to change.
Well. That was depressing.
Sutter Keely is an alcoholic at 18. There's no getting around that. There is rarely a time during his narration that he is not inebriated. There was rarely a time during his narration that I didn't want to punch him in the face.
I made the mistake of reading this as an adult. One who still drinks, yes, but not one who drinks to excess pretty much ever anymore. I forgot how I was in my 20s. I forgot how I spent nearly every night for several years drunk. How a good night was binge drinking with my friends and feeling like the only way we could have fun was if alcohol was somehow involved. Work provided unlimited access to booze and we took full advantage of that. I forgot what an asshole I was when I drank. Not a mean drunk sort of asshole, but one who did stupid stuff and thought it was hilarious.
I know that had I stayed where I was during that time of my life I might not be alive today.
And I realize that the brilliance of Tim Tharp's novel is that the entire story is told from Sutter's point of view and you, the reader are (most likely) sober while reading it and so you can read between the lines. We know Sutter isn't the life of the party. We know he is being mocked. We know he has no real friends because no one wants a friend like that. We know that he's using Aimee just as he perceives everyone else in her life does. So Sutter becomes this horribly pathetic character to us.
And there is a moment that we're all waiting for. The afterschool special moment where something horrible happens that changes Sutter. Makes him realize that he can't continue living his life this way. And it happens, but not how we expected. And it makes the story even more brilliant than originally thought. Because not everyone has that afterschool special moment. Not everyone realizes the error of their ways. Some are lost and will always remain lost. Some don't need that moment, they just sort of come to that realization themselves.
What Tim Tharp does is give us a big dose of reality. This isn't a glossy YA novel that splits people into Team Sutter and Team Someone Else. This is a PSA wrapped up in damn good writing.