Colin is a former child prodigy facing life after being
dumped for the nineteenth time, by yet another woman named Katherine. His
friend, Hassan, suggests a road trip to pull him out of his funk and the two
Chicago natives wind up in Gutshot, Tennnessee. They meet Lindsey and her
mother Hollis, who offers them summer jobs at the tampon string factory she
owns. As Colin attempts to get over Katherine XIX, he struggles to create a
mathematical theorem to predict and graphically model the course of his
romantic relationships with the Katherines. In the course of getting over
himself and his status as dumpee, he must figure out what to do with his life and
figure out how to get and keep the girl.
Colin experiences emotional
realism due to his heartbreak. He is a believable, likeable character, and his
funny, happy-go-lucky friend Hassan contrasts wonderfully with Colin’s anguish.
Colin experiences person-against-self
conflict because he believes he will never amount to anything. And almost
everyone has been dumped, so it’s easy to sympathize with Colin even when he is
acting pathetic. What will also resonate with teens is the dilemma of
popularity versus doing something that matters. Which is more important? The
humor and yes, the profanity, will appeal to teens.
I chose this novel because I’d heard John Green was a very
popular Young Adult author who connects with his fans via social media. I loved
this novel, and at times laughed so much my 9-year old became curious. Some of
the language I could not share with him! Some of the humorous references to
Kentucky and Tennessee were a bit irreverent, but that’s my perspective from being
from the state.
What really caught my interest was the appendix. John Green
had a mathematician friend develop “The Theorem of Underlying Katherine
Predictability”. He explains the basics
on how to plot ordered pairs, explains the Cartesian coordinate system, and
describes a function. Having students read the appendix would be a fun,
creative lead-in to a unit on graphing equations in Algebra. I plan on book talking this book and using the appendix as an introduction to my graphing unit in Algebra 1 this year.
Mathematics Standard Grade 8 F: Define, Evaluate, Compare
functions. Use functions to model relationships between quantities.
Robin, you didn't have to post both this week, but I LOVE YOUR reflection. I definitely am copying it and want to go find the book.
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