Young Adult Book Reading Challenges discussion
Memoirs of a Teenage Amnesiac
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Angie, YA lovin mod!!
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Jul 05, 2010 06:34PM

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Do you mean someone other than Will? James? Because I do think Naomi & Will will happen.



Lani, the second half I was disappointed with because she was so dishonest with everyone around her, even the people she said she cared for the most.

I just can't imagine how hard it would be to completely forget who you are, try to recreate yourself, and then have to reconcile both selves when your memory returns. I don't remember the specifics of why she didn't tell anyone she got her memory back, but I would assume taking some time to herself to figure out who she wanted to be wouldn't be out of the question.



As for the nicknames, she didn't have one with James, because they were each fuzzy about their pasts, or that's what they told each other. Wasn't it her sister who called her No-me? Her Mom was too scared of more rejection to use a nickname, wasn't she?
I was really glad when her Dad laid down the punishments when she went to California! And I was amused that he had to ask her what being grounded involved...
Her parents were anything but perfect, but I really liked that they were there, even when she was treating them badly.
Also, Will's mom and James' mom were pretty wonderful. And the teachers had a presence in her school life, too. Too many YA books I've read recently have no parents or adults in the mix.

Love the paragraph on page 259 hardback when Naomi's dad tells her about how much you forget when you are older. Who your teacher's were, who was the coolest, who could get you pot, where your seats in class were. Eventually you forget it all. I love that!

Kelly wrote: "I just finished another book called "Gimme a Call" about a girl who is able to call her freshman self in the past and can make changes that affect her in the present. It reminded me a little of Mem..."
That sounds very interesting. I wonder what I would tell myself. I like the idea in Memoirs about how you realize you don't really like things. Like did Naomi really like yearbook? Or not? Did she really like Tennis? Did she like photography. I would hope this book would make people look at their own lives and think about if they really like something and why do they like it.
That sounds very interesting. I wonder what I would tell myself. I like the idea in Memoirs about how you realize you don't really like things. Like did Naomi really like yearbook? Or not? Did she really like Tennis? Did she like photography. I would hope this book would make people look at their own lives and think about if they really like something and why do they like it.
Lazuline wrote: "I'm probably one of the very few people who didn't like this book...I really liked "Elsewhere" by Gabrielle Zevin, so it's not because of the writing style. I just didn't like the characters all th..."
What is Elsewhere about?
What is Elsewhere about?
Julia wrote: "I liked the first half a lot, when she had to decide who she was and what she liked and why.
Lani, the second half I was disappointed with because she was so dishonest with everyone around her, ..."
Makes me wonder if her real personality is a liar? She seemed to only lie when her memory came back.
Lani, the second half I was disappointed with because she was so dishonest with everyone around her, ..."
Makes me wonder if her real personality is a liar? She seemed to only lie when her memory came back.
Two points were brought up that I loved... the nicknames, and the parents being present. I find it interesting that she did have nicknames with almost everyone. Makes me realize that more and more nicknames are always from your past. And then she didn't have a past with James. In my life right now I have a friend staying with us who has totally changed since high school. And basically told all his friends to quit calling him by his high school nick name. I was surprised at how mad he got when people called him it, but he is trying to be ultra religious and now he wants to leave that past behind. It is hard though for his friends to let that past go... but everyone stopped calling him that nickname. Just goes to show how much meaning a nickname can have.
I too was glad about the parents being in the book. Too often do I think books leave parents out to make it more convenient for the plot. Why not make the teen 18 a senior in high school and then they could stay home alone?
I too was glad about the parents being in the book. Too often do I think books leave parents out to make it more convenient for the plot. Why not make the teen 18 a senior in high school and then they could stay home alone?


Elsewhere is basically about afterlife and what happens to people when they die - in Zevin's interpretation they get younger and younger until they become babies and return back to earth to live again. I read this book but I didn't like it as much as I did Memoirs of a Teenage Amnesiac. It felt a little too juvenile to me.

I am curious why Naomi didn't feel the same for Ace when her feelings came back. I guess I thought feelings/memories would be the same thing but I guess not.



It looks that way but we really don't know. Based on the glimpses we have of the 'before fall' Naomi, I suspect that she lied even more before she fell but she just wasn't aware of it. It didn't sound like she was a 'genuine' person before.
She may tell lies when her memory comes back but I think, over all, she's more honest - with herself about herself.
As for labelling her a liar - everybody lies. Most of the time we don't realize it - often we do it to protect people.
In Naomi's case, she lied to her father when she went to California because taking care of James had a higher priority at the time than being a dutiful daughter. I find it hard to condemn her for that. She was faced with an ethical dilemna and took the route she thought was the lesser of two evils.
I enjoyed this book but I'm not sure how memorable it will be. I read Elsewhere a while ago and I don't remember anything about it. The only reason I know I read it is because I logged it somewhere. Time will tell if this book stays with me longer. In other words will I have a memory of the memoirs.


What did everyone think about her photography project? The whole footnote theme went throughout the book. First, Will had footnotes in his account of her accident. Then, she was mentioned in the footnotes of her father's book. Last, her pictures were footnotes to each other. It was like the footnotes told the real story, but lots of people just skip them altogether. At least, I never read the footnotes to anything before reading this book. Now, I think I'll take a closer look.




Grace wrote: "Angie wrote: "Makes me wonder if her real personality is a liar? She seemed to only lie when her memory came back. "
It looks that way but we really don't know. Based on the glimpses we have of th..."
I agree about this book being non-memorable. I don't think this is one I will remember in a few months!
It looks that way but we really don't know. Based on the glimpses we have of th..."
I agree about this book being non-memorable. I don't think this is one I will remember in a few months!
Courtney wrote: "I agree with PP about liking the first half (before Naomi got her memory back) more than the second. Although, her parents seemed to play a larger role as the book progressed, or maybe we just got ..."
Good point! The footnotes were everywhere, as if there were some points were just hidden thoughts underneath it all.
Good point! The footnotes were everywhere, as if there were some points were just hidden thoughts underneath it all.
Lynn wrote: "I am not finished with book, I am on page 209. Something that struck me as out of whack was the lack of understanding of how schools operate now. No child with a traumatic brain injury would re-e..."
The book was really kinda lacking the medical information. I don't know much about how schools work but I did think it was very strange that she was just let right back into school where she left off. I thought for sure the school would have to test her in subjects to even see how much she still knew.
I also wondered if she was so tired and falling asleep in school that maybe her dad should've had her home schooled for a while.
The book was really kinda lacking the medical information. I don't know much about how schools work but I did think it was very strange that she was just let right back into school where she left off. I thought for sure the school would have to test her in subjects to even see how much she still knew.
I also wondered if she was so tired and falling asleep in school that maybe her dad should've had her home schooled for a while.

It is nice to hear from someone who knows how schools would handle this type of situation. Otherwise I would've really only been able to guess at what a school would do in my head.

Books mentioned in this topic
Elsewhere (other topics)Memoirs of a Teenage Amnesiac (other topics)