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Title:Suicide Notes
Author:Michael Thomas Ford
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:First Edition
Pages:Pages: 295 pages
Published:October 14th 2008 by HarperTeen (first published October 1st 2008)
Categories:Young Adult. LGBT. Contemporary. Health. Mental Health. Fiction
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Suicide Notes Paperback | Pages: 295 pages
Rating: 3.9 | 18975 Users | 1473 Reviews

Explanation During Books Suicide Notes

I'm not crazy. I don't see what the big deal is about what happened. But apparently someone does think it's a big deal because here I am. I bet it was my mother. She always overreacts.

Fifteen-year-old Jeff wakes up on New Year's Day to find himself in the hospital. Make that the psychiatric ward. With the nutjobs. Clearly, this is all a huge mistake. Forget about the bandages on his wrists and the notes on his chart. Forget about his problems with his best friend, Allie, and her boyfriend, Burke. Jeff's perfectly fine, perfectly normal, not like the other kids in the hospital with him. Now they've got problems. But a funny thing happens as his forty-five-day sentence drags on: the crazies start to seem less crazy.

Compelling, witty, and refreshingly real, Suicide Notes is a darkly humorous novel from award-winning author Michael Thomas Ford that examines that fuzzy line between "normal" and the rest of us.


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Original Title: Suicide Notes
ISBN: 0060737557 (ISBN13: 9780060737559)
Edition Language: English
Setting: United States of America

Rating Epithetical Books Suicide Notes
Ratings: 3.9 From 18975 Users | 1473 Reviews

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This book is an stealthy, cat-like emotional NINJA...The story started off all whistling and nonchalant like it was going to be a light dose of fluffy teenage angst. Then, halfway through, it crept up behind me, tapped me gently on the feelings and slipped silently into my core to snuggle...Ninja style. We start off meeting 15 year old Jeff who has just awoken on New Years Day after a botched suicide attempt to find himself involuntarily committed to a mental treatment facility for 45 days. Of

The saving grace of this book for me - what brought it up from one star to two - is that I needed to keep reading it in hopes that the writing would suddenly interest me. Books about mentally ill teens are rare enough, and books about LGBT youth are even scarcer. However, Suicide Notes was overall a disappointment on both fronts.The book opens with 15-year-old Jeff arriving in a mental hospital on New Year's Day after a suicide attempt, reluctant to serve his 45-day "sentence". From the get-go,

Believe it or not, this is actually a really funny book. You wouldn't think so based on the title and the subject, but 15-year-old Jeff will have you laughing out loud throughout his story. He's in a mental hospital because he tried to slit his wrists on New Year's Eve, he's surrounded by kids who are clearly crazier than he is, and his doctor (nicknamed "Cat Poop") doesn't seem to understand that there's nothing wrong with him and won't leave him alone. Neither will the various patients who

Rating: 2.5* of fiveAll the points are for the ending, which is entirely worth the long, tedious, acne-inducing slog to get there.Seriously...does the world NEED to hear about adolescence anymore? Is there something we missed, as adults, while going through that training ground for evil demons called "junior high" (that's middle school for the under-fifty set)? If so, is it something that we actually *need*?Basically...no more. No no no. Poke me with a fork, I'm done. This work is licensed

What struck me most about this book - and unsettled me, to be honest - is the brutality of it, sugarcoated by Jeff's self-deprecating irony, witticism and sarcastic outlook on adolescence. He is one of those characters I particularly appreciate in teen lit for their no-nonsense attitude, for just telling things how they are. An honest, non-emo voice. The themes approached in this book are not light, despite seemingly narrated in a light-hearted way: teen suicide, familial dysfunctions, personal

4.5 stars "That sounds so weird: kill yourself. It makes it sound like you tried to murder someone, only that someone is you. But killing someone is wrong and I don't think suicide is. It's my life, right?" There was a period in my life when all I read were issue-driven contemporaries. Eating disorders, suicides, rape... the works. But then all that excess of Jodi Picoult and Laurie Halse Anderson made me seriously depressed and I moved on to the bestselling Paranormal Romances at the time. Boy,

I really liked the write style feel like you're reading book of 2018 not 2008 funny book i really enjoyed 💜💜✨

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