OH MY, OH MY!
I've been in a very bad condition for the past few days, mostly because of [clears throat] PMS, and this book has been staying at the very end of my Kindle library, and oh my, thank you universe, and silly finger for casually tapping this book!
It's Hari Anak Nasional or National Children's Day in my country here in Indonesia, and I feel like I'm celebrating it with just the right book.
It tells you about a disheartened, messed up teacher with a scandalous past meeting screwed up group of eighth graders who were told they were failures called, The Unteachables. Because they can't be taught. Or so meany people said.
Mr. Kermit (or Ribbit, as the Unteachables referred him to everytime he enters the class. [IKR, genius!]) hated his life already, and it seems that all the world helped him suffer. After a scandal 20 years ago, all he wanted was a nice, peaceful early retirement. But then, the mean superintendent put him in the worst place possible : a class filled with the "Unteachables". A group of eight graders with problems. The dumb class.
But then, it turned out that The Unteachables were nothing like they were labeled with. And if he's totally honest with himself, The Unteachables even reminded him of a role that he had left behind, years ago : a teacher. A good one.
This book is a fast and easy read, I finished it within a day (which is a HUGE thing for me, because I'm a very moody reader). I LOVE the writing style : simple, and straightforward with equal parts of description and conversation. Oh screw it, I think I've found my NEW favorite author!
This book is witty and silly and also VERY funny. I literally laughed out loud in many many parts. But it also made me teary-eyed so often. I wouldn't say it was the PMS, this book just moved me in a heartwarming and sweet kinds of way. [Or yeah, maybe it was the PMS].
The POV varied between the characters with each chapters, and I LOVE how the author managed to sprinkle each of the character's distinct inner thoughts and attitude. You can sense that "yes, the narrator of this chapter is definitely different from the one before", and I adore Mr. Korman for that.
The author also didn't state anything physical about the characters clear and explicitly, only small parts that contributed to the story. And I think that's new for me, it gave you an opportunity to openly imagine the characters in your mind.
There's literally nothing wrong with this book, except that it was too short. I NEED MORE!
And okay, also that this book was predictable. But my only expectation was to feel better and distracted, and it did me good!
To conclude, I WOULD DEFINITELY RECOMMEND THIS TO EVERYONE, especially those who need feel-good, wholesome, and easy to read book.