From Publishers Weekly
A
trite coming-of-age novel that could easily appeal to a YA readership,
filmmaker Chbosky's debut broadcasts its intentions with the publisher's
announcement that ads will run on MTV. Charlie, the wallflower of the title,
goes through a veritable bath of bathos in his 10th grade year, 1991. The novel
is formatted as a series of letters to an unnamed "friend," the first
of which reveals the suicide of Charlie's pal Michael. Charlie's response--valid
enough--is to cry. The crying soon gets out of hand, though--in subsequent
letters, his father, his aunt, his sister and his sister's boyfriend all become
lachrymose. Charlie has the usual dire adolescent problems--sex, drugs, the
thuggish football team--and they perplex him in the usual teen TV ways. [...]
Into these standard teenage issues Chbosky infuses a droning insistence on
Charlie's supersensitive disposition. Charlie's English teacher and others have
a disconcerting tendency to rhapsodize over Charlie's giftedness, which seems
to consist of Charlie's unquestioning assimilation of the teacher's taste in
books. In the end we learn the root of Charlie's psychological problems, and we
confront, with him, the coming rigors of 11th grade, ever hopeful that he'll
find a suitable girlfriend and increase his vocabulary.
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.
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