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Blog: Galley Cat (Mediabistro) (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Bookselling, John Green, Paper Towns, ibooks bestsellers list, Add a tag
Blog: Galley Cat (Mediabistro) (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Sam Bruno, Videos, Adaptation, John Green, Paper Towns, Add a tag
Sam Bruno has unleashed a single from the Paper Towns movie soundtrack. The video embedded above contains the full track, “Search Party.”
According to BuzzFeed, some of the other artists being featured on the album include Vampire Weekend, The Mountain Goats and Nat & Alex Wolff. Click on these links to watch the first, second, and third film trailers.
Add a CommentBlog: readergirlz (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: john green, paper towns, roundup of discussions, Add a tag
Discussion about Paper Towns with John
Life-changing discoveries
People as mirrors and windows
Who is your accomplice?
Revenge
Best friendsReactions
The end of the book
Extras
Welcome, John!
Street Team review, Jacqueline
Things to know about John!
Playlist for Paper Towns
Welcome, Nerdfighters! Add a Comment
Blog: readergirlz (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: john green, paper towns, June 2010, Add a tag
We have loved spending the month of June with John Green, discussing his fantastic novel Paper Towns! Things we've learned:
Blog: readergirlz (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Blog: readergirlz (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Blog: readergirlz (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: john green, paper towns, June 2010, manic pixie dream girls, Add a tag
Little Willow remembered a discussion that went on a little while ago that centered around an article in Onion A.V. Club about the "Manic Pixie Dream Girl" (MPDG), girls like Natalie Portman in Garden State (shown) who--according to writer Nathan Rabin--"exist solely in the fevered imaginations of sensitive writer-directors to teach broodingly soulful young men to embrace life and its infinite mysteries and adventures." Jezebel weighed in too, and so did our featured author John Green, in regards to Margo of Paper Towns:
"Margo is certainly presented by Q as a Manic Pixie Dream Girl at the beginning of PT. Absolutely. But that only acknowledges that some boys believe in Manic Pixie Dream Girls; it doesn't argue that MPDGs actually exist, or that Margo is one." --JG
Blog: readergirlz (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Blog: readergirlz (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: john green, paper towns, June 2010, Add a tag
Blog: Ypulse (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: john green, elizabeth scott, living dead girl, paper towns, lynn weingarten, wherever nina lies, hold me tight, lorie ann gover, yalsa readergirlz, Books, Add a tag
We've made no secret of our love for the team behind readergirlz and the innovative job they do championing teen fiction. This week the divas give us, YA marketing folks and, most importantly, young readers just one more reason: by leveraging their... Read the rest of this post
Add a CommentBlog: Underage Reading (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: math, john green, Paper Towns, Wednesday Words, Green, John, things Weber left out of his theories of bureaucracy (but shouldn't have), Add a tag
Honestly, in the governmental bureaucracy of Winter Park High School, Jasper Hanson was like Deputy Assistant Undersecretary of Athletics and Malfeasance. When a guy like that gets promoted to Executive Vice President of Urine Gunning, immediate action must be taken.
– John Green, PAPER TOWNS
I apologize for the post title, y’all. I have a math midterm tomorrow, is my excuse. Actually, I’m finding that math is a handy excuse for many things. When I’m caught behaving abnormally, I just wave my hand vaguely and say, “Math.” Most people are so horrified by the thought that I might elaborate that they leave it at that.
Posted in Green, John, Paper Towns, Wednesday WordsBlog: laurasalas (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: paper towns, Add a tag
I read Paper Towns, by John Green, last week. (It was good, but reminded me too much of Looking for Alaska.) Until I picked up this book and started reading, I had forgotten that it was set at my real-life high school. Not that a ton of it takes place actually at school. But how weird to read book where all the main characters are attending Winter Park High School in the Orlando area. The high school I went to. And to see references to small towns that I remember from my own school days. I've read adult novels set in Orlando (where I was born and grew up) or in the Minneapolis area (where I've lived for 19 years now), but I haven't read any/many mg or ya novels specifically set in either place. That has me wondering: Have you read (or written) a kids' or teen book set in your own hometown? |
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Blog: Underage Reading (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: metaphors, Paper Towns, Childhood Reading, This--like so many things--is all about me, Green, John, Add a tag
Like the blogger Drek at the sociology blog Scatterplot, from which I am stealing this video, I take things much too literally. I, too, blame this trait for my inability to “get” poetry (a fact which causes no end of frustration to my boyfriend, who writes it; he thinks I’m just not trying).
There’s a particular irony in my case, though, because I am a highly sarcastic individual. And yet also highly gullible, as I am, inexplicably, prone to interpreting others credibly. Said boyfriend and I used to live in Brooklyn, where we had a really busybody landlord living on the ground floor of the same building — a fact I was not too happy about. I was kind of ill when we moved in, so I went to sleep in the middle of the floor, surrounded by boxes, while he went out with his friend. The next morning I was expressing my fears about living with a landlord who always seemed to be hanging around watching, when this exchange occurred:
BOYFRIEND: Yeah, she was still sitting outside watching when I got in last night.
ELIZABETH: What? What time was that?
BOYFRIEND: Maybe 2, 3 AM.
ELIZABETH: Oh my god. We’ll never be able to get away from her! We’ll have to run in and out of the house!
BOYFRIEND: Actually, she said she was going to stop by for brunch this morning.
ELIZABETH: [horror]
BOYFRIEND: I think she’ll be here any minu– [pauses, listening] — Is that her?
ELIZABETH: [grim, efficient determination] Okay, let’s think. Maybe we can sneak out the window!
I was totally serious, y’all. (We lived on the third floor of a building with very high ceilings, by the way.) The boyfriend, fortunately, was not.
Anyway, after that excessively long and irrelevant set-up, here is the literally-minded Total Eclipse of the Heart:
And now, to finally make this nominally relevant to our blog: I have noticed that my reading habits have changed with the blog, and I’m not sure if it’s blogging itself (which has made me think more about what I’m reading and take note of cool lines for the Wednesday Words) or things I started doing at around the same time, which partially inspired me to start the blog (reading other blogs, reading books about how fiction is constructed, reading more new children’s lit instead of my same old favorites). But one thing I’ve observed is how much more I appreciate metaphors than I did when I was little.
Like, I had this bizarre experience reading PAPER TOWNS:
Internal
MonologueDialogue
- I love this passage about the strings and the ships and the grass!
- Um, it’s a two-page passage about metaphors for death.
- But it’s beautiful!
- The characters are talking to each other about what’s the best metaphor for death!!!
- But they’re picking such good ones!
(I have very explicit arguments with myself in my head.)
So, is this just a sign of getting older — I was never one of those super-literary kids; I loved to read, but it was always trash — or is book blogging going to make me a more high-minded reader? Might I somehow become a poetry fan after all??
(…Doubtful.)
Posted in Childhood Reading, Green, John, Paper Towns, This--like so many things--is all about meBlog: Bugs and Bunnies (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: children's books, book review, John Green, young adult novel, Paper Towns, Add a tag
The way I figure it, everyone gets a miracle. Like, I will probably never be struck by lightning, or win a Nobel Prize, or become the dictator of a small nation in the Pacific Islands, or contract terminal ear cancer, or spontaneously combust. But if you consider all the unlikely things together, at least one of them will probably happen to each of us... ...My miracle was this: out of all the houses in all the subdivisions in all of Florida, I ended up living next door to Margo Roth Spiegelman.
Blog: Kate's Book Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: john green, paper towns, book review, Add a tag
I just discovered that GoodReads now offers the option of cross posting book reviews to a blog, which is terrific, since I always mean to post more book reviews but have trouble finding the time.
I devoured an ARC of John Green's Paper Towns recently, and it was everything I hoped it would be. Here's my micro-review (because school started this week, after all).
(Note for those wondering why all my reviews on GoodReads get five stars... I review books that I love or that I'm pretty sure someone else will love. I'm a teacher as well as a writer, so I'm in the business of selling good books, and I'd hate for someone NOT to pick up a book just because it wasn't my cup of tea. My solution is to shout about the books I love from the rooftops and set the others quietly aside so other people who do love them can talk about those.)
Paper Towns by John Green
My review
rating: 5 of 5 stars
It's hard to choose a favorite of John Green's books, but for me, this one is right up there with Looking for Alaska and An Abundance of Katherines, and I bet it will get the same kind of award buzz. Paper Towns has phenomenal voice and that trademark mix of humor and gut-wrenching teen angst that makes his writing so made-of-awesome. Plus some Walt Whitman connections, just in case you weren't won over already. Loved it!
Paper Towns was one of the funniest books I have ever read. Does this mean I have the sense of humor of a 17-year-old guy? uh oh
NotNessie (love the name!): I’m sorry to say, I think we all have a little bit of 17-year-old guy in us.