Boy Meets Boy focuses on gay tenth-grader Paul, who attends a very accepting California high school, where many students are open about their sexuality. Paul has openly dated many boys in his school but suddenly finds himself in a dead end relationship-wise. That is, until he meets the adorable, green-eyed Noah in the self-help section of his favorite bookstore...
My favorite sections of the novel involve Paul's coming out stories. At five years old, he announces to his mom, “I'm gay!" In response, his mother shouts across the house to Paul’s father, “Honey, Paul’s learned a new word!” Levithan also brings to life several colorful characters. We meet drag queen Infinite Darlene, who is both the Homecoming Queen and the star of the football team. We also see how Paul's best friend, Tony, battles his homophobic parents and a religion that does not accept homosexuals.
The tween literature landscape is already rife with a variety of races and backgrounds, characters with handicaps, kids with a variety of interests, and many different family structures. It is great to finally see so many characters with which LGBT teens can relate. Levithan’s novel provides kids with an excellent example of what an accepting school and community looks like and could provide much-needed hope for LGBT kids whose home and school lives are not so welcoming to their sexuality. Simply because the central characters are already well into high school, I would recommend this book mostly for seventh through ninth graders. I would also recommend Boy Meets Boy to straight and gay readers alike; yes, this book focuses primarily on homosexual characters, but it's not far off from any other tween novel that focuses on love and relationships.
Levithan, D. (2003). Boy Meets Boy. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. ISBN 0-375-82400-6
My favorite sections of the novel involve Paul's coming out stories. At five years old, he announces to his mom, “I'm gay!" In response, his mother shouts across the house to Paul’s father, “Honey, Paul’s learned a new word!” Levithan also brings to life several colorful characters. We meet drag queen Infinite Darlene, who is both the Homecoming Queen and the star of the football team. We also see how Paul's best friend, Tony, battles his homophobic parents and a religion that does not accept homosexuals.
The tween literature landscape is already rife with a variety of races and backgrounds, characters with handicaps, kids with a variety of interests, and many different family structures. It is great to finally see so many characters with which LGBT teens can relate. Levithan’s novel provides kids with an excellent example of what an accepting school and community looks like and could provide much-needed hope for LGBT kids whose home and school lives are not so welcoming to their sexuality. Simply because the central characters are already well into high school, I would recommend this book mostly for seventh through ninth graders. I would also recommend Boy Meets Boy to straight and gay readers alike; yes, this book focuses primarily on homosexual characters, but it's not far off from any other tween novel that focuses on love and relationships.
Levithan, D. (2003). Boy Meets Boy. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. ISBN 0-375-82400-6
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