"Somewhere off the Southern State Parkway in Nassau County, NY is the thown of ""Waterfield"" and in it is Waterfield High School, attended by, among Ro-Anne Sommers, crowned Little Miss Eastern United States, now ponytailed and prettiest-girl-at-school-best-cheerleader, at fifteen making out in a Chevy backseat with...Corky Henderson, his father's little man since age three, now star quarterback, king of the jocks, with only those between-game nightmares threatening his future perfect, the subject of the special dreams of...Amy Silverstein, not-so-lovely to look at, smart, the flip side of Ro_Anne, a born late-blooer, partner in spirit of...Guy Fowler, brainy, pint-sized, the flip side of Corky...or so it would seem... Five years later, at the class of '59's reunion, you can hardly tell the players by their names. What happened, how and why is the story of Yearbook. It is also the story of anyone who has ever been young, who remembers his or her senior prom with its ""shining, mirrored ball, spinning, fragmenting rality."" It is a story of growing up in America."
Wow - I have been searching for the name of this book for YEARS. I am soooo excited that it has been reissued! I am about to order it right now so I can read it again ASAP.
Have you ever read a book as a teenager that moved you so deeply that you never forgot it? This would be that book for me. As a gawky, unpopular teenager, I could relate so strongly with the girl who pretended to have disdain for the high school quarterback and secretly desired him. Even now, almost thirty five years later, I remember how I felt reading this book. I doubt that I would feel the same way if I read it now, which is one of the reasons why I never will. Some things need to remain unvisited.
Honestly conflicted with this. I did finish it, and I was invested. But I didn't really like it much.
Found myself frustrated with the way the boy characters spoke about girls. The story takes place in the fifties, and was published in 1972 . Maybe that's just the way it was. But it demoralized me nonetheless. Especially knowing teen boys read this in the 70s.
Like of course you want to write in a way that mirrors life. But then it is simultaneously frustrating to think that harmful shit is reflected back as standard/okay/normal. This was probably the moment (or, momentS because they say it throughout) that irked me the most- the charming football star tells his buddies "no means yes" and that girls say no because they don't want to come off as easy but deep down they really want it so you kinda just have to be persistent. And I understand that especially until the sexual revolution, some women preserved their safety by playing innocent and coy in sexual situations- I am NOT ignorant to that... ie. Baby It's Cold Outside. But this wasn't that. This was boys just absolutely BULLDOZING through girls' reluctance. You can tell that even the narrator/author was clueless to it. He truly did believe the virtue in the boys' persistence.. at least a little bit.. boys will be boys. There is a difference between coyness/demurity and then straight up absolute discomfort that ends with yielding to sexual advances because you realize that your "no"s aren't working.
ALL IN ALL- No need to read this one. It does not stand the test of time in my opinion. But yeah, it has its entertaining moments.