Initial Thoughts: Some of the language is a bit 80's or 90's-ish, which really takes you out of the book at times, especially when you realize it was published in 2003. Yes, some of the 90's might have still been around by then, but not this much.
Also, the first couple of chapters act more as a PSA than a storyline, which is a bit disappointing. Also, do high school jocks really act like that?
The idea of Jason being interviewed by the local news station because he came out. I understand that he is on the varsity basketball team, and it would have been a bit of a big deal around that time, but I don't quite see this as being all that realistic.
Okay, I have not finished this book, and I will not finish this book. It has finally taken a turn to the absolutely what the hell realm of thinking.
I understand that this book takes place in the early 2000's, so there were still a lot of small-minded people around, and that there weren't as many ways to keep gay teens from getting picked on (heck, we still can't keep anyone from not getting picked on) but the way that this book portrays it...
At first, I could have believed it. But then, by the point that we get to Kyle's swim meet and the bull that Charlie puts Kyle through, and the fact that that sorry excuse of a Coach doesn't do anything except for blame everything on Kyle. I mean... What on earth? Everyone is 100% Jason for coming out. Why not Kyle? Why can't the Coach say, "Hey, look Charlie, you are all chummy chummy with Jason, why aren't you with Kyle? What makes them so different?" But does she do that? No. She goes and tells Kyle that all of the teasing and everything is all his fault and that he is the one being disrespectful because he isn't just sitting there and taking it and he has the gall to stand up for his basic human rights! As I said, I understand that this was written in 2003, but holy crap, Batman! This is just stupid! Having two radically different reactions, in the same book, in the same high school, for two sports team members is just insane.
Also, the whole Jason getting seen as a great Role Model and there being media coverage over it and everything? Who cares if a high school varsity sports star is gay? I don't see why that would be making the local news.
This book blows everything out of proportion. Including the stuff with Nelson and Jeremy's relationship. Jeremy's character gets super paranoid, when all he has to say to Nelson is "Look, I don't like you joking about those sort of things, this is a serious issue." He doesn't need to go screaming at Nelson about stuff. Nelson is a little annoying, but bearably so.
I just... by the time I got to page 180, I just could not take it anymore. It might pick up after this, I don't know. But honestly, I don't really care anymore.
The first book was good. Good characters, believable situations.
This second one? The characters have been thrown into insane situations that make no freaking sense if both situations are in the same universe.
Why is Charlie all right with Jason being gay and not Kyle?! Is it really just for image?