Fly on the Wall: How One Girl Saw Everything
by
E. Lockhart
At the Manhattan School for Art and Music, where everyone is “different” and everyone is “special,” Gretchen Yee feels ordinary. She’s the kind of girl who sits alone at lunch, drawing pictures of Spider-Man, so she won’t have to talk to anyone; who has a crush on Titus but won’t do anything about it; who has no one to hang out with when her best (and only real) friend Kat...more
Paperback, 192 pages
Published
December 18th 2008
by Delacorte Books for Young Readers
(first published March 14th 2006)
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Fast read -- I read it in literally less than one hour. Gretchen is a shy, standoffish teen who loves reading & drawing superhero comics and attends a Manhattan magnet school for the arts. Feeling confused by her feelings toward Titus, a skinny Art Rat boy, and out of place in her school, she blurts out her wish to be a fly on the wall of the boy's locker room. And does she ever get her wish! Funny, smart, and uncharacteristically honest and straightforward about straight teen girl lust -- altho...more
Once again, E.Lockhart has earned major kudos for her frank and honest dialog and for her genuine and oh so realistic characters.
Gretchen is insecure, as so many teen girls are, though she posses above average drawing skills for her age, and has been attending an arts focused magnet school, which is highly competitive. Gretchen fills invisible, after all, when everyone is unique, no one is. She doesn't fit in, and despite her efforts to make herself an individual, she feels as thoug...more
Gretchen is insecure, as so many teen girls are, though she posses above average drawing skills for her age, and has been attending an arts focused magnet school, which is highly competitive. Gretchen fills invisible, after all, when everyone is unique, no one is. She doesn't fit in, and despite her efforts to make herself an individual, she feels as thoug...more
This book is perfect for a good laugh.
Honestly, when I picked it up, I thought it would be more insightful, and deep. But it's not at all.
It is just really funny and really entertaining.
If you are the type of person who only likes books that have a deeper meaning and that makes you think, I don't recommend it. But if you like to laugh and would like a break from thinking, I do recommend it.
The characters in this book are easy to relate to, and the overall atmosph...more
Honestly, when I picked it up, I thought it would be more insightful, and deep. But it's not at all.
It is just really funny and really entertaining.
If you are the type of person who only likes books that have a deeper meaning and that makes you think, I don't recommend it. But if you like to laugh and would like a break from thinking, I do recommend it.
The characters in this book are easy to relate to, and the overall atmosph...more
Summary:
Teenager, Gretchen Yee, is one of the few privileged to attend a fine arts school in Manhattan her high school years. At least that's how it was marketed to her - a privilege. She didn't realize that she would be too odd even for the Art Rats. Gretchen just doesn't understand them, and although she's pretty envious over their friendship with one and another, she prefers sitting by herself during lunch drawing her Spider-Man comics. Her life begins to unravel when she finds out her p...more
Teenager, Gretchen Yee, is one of the few privileged to attend a fine arts school in Manhattan her high school years. At least that's how it was marketed to her - a privilege. She didn't realize that she would be too odd even for the Art Rats. Gretchen just doesn't understand them, and although she's pretty envious over their friendship with one and another, she prefers sitting by herself during lunch drawing her Spider-Man comics. Her life begins to unravel when she finds out her p...more
A fast read, yet also an enjoyable read. Gretchen is a standoffish teen who draws Spiderman and graphic novels at a Manhattan Magnet school of the arts for other talented teens. Unfortunately, due to her standoffish nature as well as painful shyness she doesn’t understand guys whatsoever. Her secret crush, Titus, causes her to become even more confused about her feelings for him and boys in general. Thus making her blurt out that she wishes she were a fly on the wall of the boys gym locker ...more
Carmen Yeung
rated it
·
review of another edition
Recommends it for:
my friends
Recommended to Carmen by:
library
Shelves:
2010-2011-advisory
I picked out a lot of the books off the recommendation list in the library, and sadly none of them was on the summer suggested list. But since its just suggested, i went ahead and read the books i borrowed. And everything turned out quite wonderfully and fulfilled my summer with a lot of entertainment from these books. in this book, this girl named Gretchen Yee, shes chinese and had red hair. She thought no one would likeher. At the end of first chapter, she wished to become a fly so she can be ...more
I was totally skepetical of this book, but it turned out to be a decent read. Gretchen Yee is an artist at a performing arts high school. She's an oddball in a land of odd characters. She tries to figure out some of her classmates, but can't. She wishes should be (you guessed it) a fly on the wall and watch what goes on. Shazam - her wish comes true (we don't really ever figure out how, but just go with it!)... She awakes as a fly in (of all places) the boys' locker room! She spends a week...more
The fiction novel Fly on the Wall by e.lockhart, was the first novel that did not satisfy me and made me to think that it was a wrong choice that I picked this novel to read. The reason why I chose this novel is because one of my friend told me that this is a love story but the title was Fly on the Wall so it made me to wonder how does the fly do something with a love story? So I wanted to try spending my time and get the meaning behind it. I thought it was a interesting idea that the main chara...more
Well, it had to happen sometime. I've read five E. Lockhart novels in the past two months. Loved four of them. Really, really, really didn't like this one. I wouldn't go so far as to say hate because hate is a strong word. It doesn't change my opinion of Lockhart or her skills as a writer. I still think she's fantastic. But...that doesn't mean that I can recommend this book to anyone, either.
I'll break it down a little.
So she's still got the sassy female front-runner. On...more
I'll break it down a little.
So she's still got the sassy female front-runner. On...more
Gretchen Yee, in E. Lockhart’s Fly on the Wall: How One Girl Saw Everything, is a sophomore at the Manhattan School for Art and Music. When she wishes she were a fly on the wall of the boys' locker room, she never expects her wish will come true in such a dramatic way.
Gretchen isn’t exactly an average teenage girl, so some readers might have difficultly relating to her. She attends a special high school for artistic students in New York City and spends her time reading and illustra...more
Gretchen isn’t exactly an average teenage girl, so some readers might have difficultly relating to her. She attends a special high school for artistic students in New York City and spends her time reading and illustra...more
Full review at http://yannabe.com/2010/03/26/review-fly...
Summary: 16-year-old Gretchen doesn’t fit in at The Manhattan School for Art and Music, something weird is going on between her parents, and her best friend seems to be avoiding her.
Review: This one was just okay for me.
I was liking the story until about halfway through when the action slowed way down. I’m not spoiling anything you can’t get from the Amazon description—and maybe I’m outing myself as a ja...more
Summary: 16-year-old Gretchen doesn’t fit in at The Manhattan School for Art and Music, something weird is going on between her parents, and her best friend seems to be avoiding her.
Review: This one was just okay for me.
I was liking the story until about halfway through when the action slowed way down. I’m not spoiling anything you can’t get from the Amazon description—and maybe I’m outing myself as a ja...more
This book was brought to my attention by a parent who thought it was inappropriate for a middle school library so I read it. The jury is still out. I enjoyed the story line, which is a girl named Gretchen who goes to an artsy school. She doesn't understand boys and makes a wish to be a fly on the wall in the boys locker room. For whatever reason it comes true. She spends a week as a fly and sees and hears a lot of things. She talks about what the boys look like (she likes to refer to their ...more
How would you feel if you were suddenly given the opportunity to learn everything you've always wanted in secret, hidden in the deep corners of a locker room? Well hey, this is what exactly happens to Gretchen Yee in Fly on the Wall by E. Lockhart in a Manhattan Arts High School. Everyone is different and unique in her high school and it's pretty annoying to her because she's just a plain old girl who likes art. Everyone in her school almost tries to be too different and Gretchen just s...more
Fly on the Wall starts with 15 year old Gretchen Yee. At first I thought her story was basically one of teen angst, but it's much more than that. It teaches acceptance and love in one's self. It gives girls a peek into the world of men, their relationships, their feelings.
The fly chapter, weird as it sounds, actually ended up being my favorite section of the book. At first I was like, "wow. this reads like a children's novel minus the language.", but her transformation bec...more
The fly chapter, weird as it sounds, actually ended up being my favorite section of the book. At first I was like, "wow. this reads like a children's novel minus the language.", but her transformation bec...more
A quick, fun story about a girl getting what goes on behind closed doors of the boys locker room. Believe it or not, she ends up realizing that her life isn't as horrible as she thought it was, and everyone else isn't as perfect as she thought they were. Gretchen is a sympathetic character who is likable despite having a woe-is-me attitude in the beginning. Her life isn't perfect, but neither is anyone else's. What's important is you go for what you want and stay open to change. I'm not sure th...more
Nicole
rated it
·
review of another edition
Recommends it for:
good (13 year old) girls wanting to be bad
Shelves:
fantasy-undragon-such,
ya
It's obvious in hindsight that a book whose premise is a girl-turned-fly watching the scene from the ceiling of the boys locker room would be all about sex. But I was still taken aback, especially since all the lustiness came out of nowhere. The first half of the book is character exposition, meet poor awkward comics-obsessed Gretchen. She turns into a fly, sees her first naked male classmate, and WHAM! Lusty lustfullness. Naked, naked, naked.
Sidenote: And yet, even with all t...more
Sidenote: And yet, even with all t...more
Book Review: Fly on the Wall (182 pages)
Boys are impossible to understand. You may try to understand them many different ways. You could ask them whats on their mind, figure out what/who they like, or observe how they act in public. These probably help, but what they do in secret, who they are when no one's watching, that would be the key to the boy code. In the book Fly on the Wall, Gretchen is searching for answers. Author E. Lockhart strives to provide them for girls a whole lot ...more
Boys are impossible to understand. You may try to understand them many different ways. You could ask them whats on their mind, figure out what/who they like, or observe how they act in public. These probably help, but what they do in secret, who they are when no one's watching, that would be the key to the boy code. In the book Fly on the Wall, Gretchen is searching for answers. Author E. Lockhart strives to provide them for girls a whole lot ...more
Easy to read and funny. I liked E. Lockhart's choice of using the terms "gherkin" and "biscuits" for basic boy/girl body part terms and she never strayed from that formula. It was simply what EVERYBODY said and that made it more teen realistic once it became part of the book vocabulary for me.
I also liked that she used the story "The Metamorphesis" by Kafka (they are reading it for literature class) as a vague foreshadowing of Gretchen's eventual predi...more
I also liked that she used the story "The Metamorphesis" by Kafka (they are reading it for literature class) as a vague foreshadowing of Gretchen's eventual predi...more
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it,
click here.
However strange/creepy the actual storyline is: a girl turns into a fly overnight and finds herself in the boys locker room at school where she lingers for a week eating garbage and sussing out the boys and then, before her mom gets home from an extended vacation, she magically finds herself back in her bed as a human, none the worse for wear and alot more boy savvy, I liked the book. I liked it because the writing seemed genuine and because the fourteen year old girl in me could totally relate...more
This is not truly an LGBT book, but does contain a gay element which is crucial to the development of the plot and storyline. Lockhart writes an interesting take on Kafka's "Metamorphosis" involving a teenage girl's ability to become a fly on the wall of the boys' locker room in high school. She almost forces the foreshadowing of the girl-to-fly change, but in a YA book it seems to work. Of most interest is the delicate hand she uses to allow the protagonist to process the meaning of t...more
I have never, in my life, heard of a penis being referred to as a gherkin. Unless this is some kind of New York youth culture thing that skipped me by as a Londoner. The same can be said for 'biscuits' in reference to BOOBIES.
It gives the Gherkin in London an entirely different image, hey! Although not really, because it always has looked like a penis. It looked like a penis when they were making it and it still looks like a penis now.
Maybe all the office workers are sitting a...more
It gives the Gherkin in London an entirely different image, hey! Although not really, because it always has looked like a penis. It looked like a penis when they were making it and it still looks like a penis now.
Maybe all the office workers are sitting a...more
This is a teen book, which I read a lot of, especially for not being a teenager... The "moral" or whatever at the end was a good one and addressed body image and self esteem which I think is great, but I don't understand why teenagers have to be portrayed as fowl mouthed sex-addicted miscreants in social situations. Either I did teenagerhood wrong or things have changed well beyond normalcy in the decade I've been out of high school. Are teenagers really this bad now? And what does...more
So Lockart is the author of the The Disreputable History of Frankie Landau-Banks, a book that I loved so much I convinced myself I should borrow every book she has written from the local library. And. Well. I was a smidgen disappointed. The main character is a student at an arts high school in New York (as someone who has taught math at a performing arts high school, I was interested) and wishes she could be a fly on the wall in the boy's locker room. First, no arts high school will have mandato...more
Gretchen Yee can't believe what a mess her life is. Her parents are getting a divorce, her grades are slipping, her best friend is blowing her off, and boys are a complete mystery.
She has a crush on Titus, but though he talks to her from time to time, she can't figure out if he LIKES her. Gretchen's class is reading The Metamorphosis in English and, inspired by the book, she wishes aloud that she could be a fly on the wall in the boys' locker room--just to find out what they reall...more
She has a crush on Titus, but though he talks to her from time to time, she can't figure out if he LIKES her. Gretchen's class is reading The Metamorphosis in English and, inspired by the book, she wishes aloud that she could be a fly on the wall in the boys' locker room--just to find out what they reall...more
Continuing my reading (chronologically backward) though Lockhart's YA books with Fly on the Wall. Lockhart is proving herself to be one of my favorite YA authors. I have to say that I think her writing is getting better with time, but this was still a fun read. Again, Gretchen Yee is an interesting, strong, vulnerable and identifiable main female character who ends up in quite a predicament. All of Lockhart's characters grow and both make mistakes and learn from them too. While there is a mag...more
This was very "poetic" and the constant indents WERE BUGGING ME! (no pun intended) XD My sense of humor is really sad.
Anyhoo, the ending was happy (WHATTT??? I know!) and it was a cute story, though the girl's life was depressing (the author had some dignity), but it was very cliche...
Some kid at an art school... why do authors always try and portray feelings via pictures and doodles? It was creative the 1st time, but the 1000th time around it got old.
...more
Anyhoo, the ending was happy (WHATTT??? I know!) and it was a cute story, though the girl's life was depressing (the author had some dignity), but it was very cliche...
Some kid at an art school... why do authors always try and portray feelings via pictures and doodles? It was creative the 1st time, but the 1000th time around it got old.
...more
This book was funny to read. Do you ever wish you'd turn into a small bug to ear what everyone thinks of you? Well in this story, Gretchen is just a typical girl at a high school. She has a crush on this one boy, but doesn't tell anyone and denies it. She hides it from her best friend. Her parents are in the process of getting a divorce, and she's moving out. She consistently wonders what the boy she likes thinks of her. She wishes to turn into a fly one day, and she does! Read more of the book ...more
maryy
added it
·
review of another edition
Recommends it for:
Teenage Girls
Recommended to maryy by:
My Aunt Barb
At the Manhattan High School fot the Arts, where everyone is "different" and everyone is "special," Gretchen Yee feels ordinary. She's the kind of girl who sits alone at lunch, drawing pictures of spider-man so that she wont have to talk to anyone;who has no one to hang out with when her best(and only real) friend, Katya, is busy.
One Day, Gretchen wishes that she were a fly on the wall in the boys' locker room - just to learn more about guys. what are they really like? ...more
One Day, Gretchen wishes that she were a fly on the wall in the boys' locker room - just to learn more about guys. what are they really like? ...more
The premise of this novel is promising: what happens when a girl (who happens to be studying “Metamorphosis”) becomes a housefly and flies into the boys’ gym locker room? She learns that confident boys aren’t so confident, that boys come in all varieties, that some are deeper, and some more shallow, than she ever thought. The overall theme, a girl growing less self absorbed, more accepting, and more able to relate to guys, is a good one; however, the novel has too much that is edgy and is jus...more
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E. Lockhart is the author of a number of teen novels. She has had nine official boyfriends, if you count the boy who asked her to go with him at a 7th grade dance and then basically never talked to her again. She has never been on a sports team of any kind and got excused from gym class by going to ballet lessons. She has a tattoo, cuts her own hair, and has worn the same perfume since high school...more
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“I love the idea of the big life - the life that matters, the life that makes a difference. The life where stuff happens, where people take action. The opposite of the life where the girl can't even speak to the boy she likes; the opposite of the life where the friends aren't even good friends, and lots of days are wasted away feeling bored and kind of okay, like nothing matters much.”
—
32 people liked it
“People think of hearts when they think of love, but a heart is a bloody organ in the body. It doesn't have any emotions. It's like a metaphor for love that has nothing to do with what love actually is.”
—
15 people liked it
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