I am catching up on some Young Adult fiction, and John Green is my
all time favorite in this category, if you take away JK Rowling, which I
think is a given. Or at least he is my second or third favorite, and
he is still writing for the youth audience, which is a big plus. This
book offers an offbeat, but ultimately wise, perspective on failed
romance, even as it explores the challenges, hilarity and occasional
moments of beauty on the path to adulthood.
At the book's core is
Colin, a recent high school graduate and former
child prodigy who attempts to apply mathematical principles to his
checkered romantic history. Colin is determined to prove The Theorem of
Underlying Katherine Predictability, which will help him understand why
he's been dumped by 19 girls named Katherine. His friend Hassan agrees
to go on an epic road trip (which lasts only about a day, when they stop
in a town and basically get stuck there) where he meets a girl who is
not named Katherine who opens up a whole new chapter in his young adult
life.
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