'Sup, dudes?
I really don't like YA novels. I'm past the age where I really remember, or much care about, the trials and tribulations of the high school social network.
Fortunately, that doesn't really matter, because Brent Hartinger has conceived of a character so charming and pleasurable to get to know that it's an unalloyed pleasure revisiting *shudder* my sophomore year and its intricate horrors.
Meet Russel Middlebrook. Russel is sixteen. He knows he's gay. His Internet chat buddies know as well. The problem is that the not-so-understanding students of Robert L. Goodkind High School may be about to discover that gay thingy as well.
In Geography Club and The Order of the Poison Oak, Russel, along with his best (straight) friend Gunnar, and their pal, the very bisexual Min, navigate the hazards of coming to terms with Russel's being gay vis-à-vis high school (Geography Club) and in the wide-open world of sleepover summer camp counselling (The Order of the Poison Oak.)
Each story is elegantly simple, and totally straightforward. What takes place in each short novel (~250 page each) can be gathered from the summaries above.
It's getting to know the totally lovable Russel, and his winsome buds, that makes this a series to settle-in with. I was hooked on the first page (of the second novel in the series.) I read the first two books in the series in reverse order. It really doesn't matter, because each book stands firmly on its own. Besides it's all in the getting-to-know anyway.
The stories are extremely simple. I would guess that they are aimed at the fourteen to sixteen year-old reader; but that's not to say there was nothing there for this jaded old reader. I wouldn't be be bothering with this review, and the series, if there weren't.
Russel is very straightforward in his attempts to understand social and sexual politics in the cloistered worlds of academe, and as a counselor at overnight summer camp. His attempts to deal with his sexuality, as it relates to life, is the series' driving force. Then there's the somewhat bemused Gunnar's attempt to get a girlfriend, or a dog. He will settle for either, or both. (Although he would definitely prefer the girlfriend.) Intervening Fate seems to be making Gunnar's search a series of enchanting pratfalls. Min is whip-smart, attractive and open to suitors of either sex. It's these three, and their satellites, that formed the true basis of attraction for this reader. The stories are attractively easy to get through, but it's the genuine sweetness and winsome nature of this troika of pals that will draw me through the entire series. This isn't Updike by any stretch, and that's such a relief! Every so often it's nice to sit down with some people you wish were your nieces or nephews, and just sympathize with their struggles with life, love and the whole damned thing. Pick up either of these two one-day reads, and enjoy a break from the tsuris that accompanies so much of the rest of m/m romance fiction.
Dude, you will be so totally glad you settled-in for the mad round that makes life with Russel and his mates fascinating and fun to follow. The series, thus far, has been a total joy to read. I hope you like it as much as I have.
Oh, and Russel's retelling of an old American Indian legend, first as truth, then twisted into fiction, had me crying like a 14 year-old girl who just heard that Justin Bieber had gotten married.