Just finished reading Paul Zindel's 1970s novel I NEVER LOVED YOUR MIND. I had to say that this one was kind of a struggle for me to get through, but I got through it. The plot centers around Dewey, and a high school dropout who gets a job at a local hospital. There he meets Yvette, the girl of his dreams, but getting in good graces with Yvette, the vegetarian, who lives in a sketchy apartment with three other guys, sleeps nonsexually in bed with one of them, cleans while in the nude, and is stealing things from the hospital, isn't exactly the kind of girl that's easy to get. She lives by her own rules and Dewey thinks he's the guy who can win her heart. This is a very strange love story. Zindel is the ruler of teen angst, but this one I just found somewhat irritating. I'll give Zindel this: he doesn't write likable characters. That's actually a compliment if you ask me. Dewey and Yvette are know-it-alls and this can get very annoying, but I work in the school system, and its kind of similar to what these kids say and do and act like in school. They're constantly lying and think they know everything about everything until you ask them what 6/12th is equivalent to, then they're speechless like you're teaching them witchcraft. But back to the story at hand... I still enjoyed it, but I will say this, it's a very mature young adult novel. These characters are all for eliminating racism in the world but have no trouble using negative words towards gay people. They swear up a storm, and there's a sex scene, but it's like I always say, these things aren't new, and fiction, good fiction anyhow, is just a mirror of ourselves. I'm sure younger people can relate to it. Sadly, it's out of print, except for on kindle. So it'll be a difficult book to find if you're looking to get your hands on it. Not one of my favorites by Zindel, but an interesting novel just the same. The one thing that stands out for me is that a female is an independent person. While the narrator, Dewey, thinks that Yvette will fall for him just as hard as he's fallen for her. If you can guess where the title comes from, it's rather a fun read, but kind of out there as far as probability and full of 1970s sex, smoking, drinking, tripping on drugs, parents who don't seem to be anywhere in sight, and issues that we in our precious 2021 era might deem inappropriate, but they still exist just the dame. Paul Zindel's I NEVER LOVED YOUR MIND.