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Alice, I Think
 
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Alice, I Think (Audio Cassette)

by Susan Juby (Author), Angela Goethals (Narrator)
3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (18 customer reviews)

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4 new from CDN$ 45.93 3 used from CDN$ 35.00

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Product Details


Product Description

From Amazon.com

2001 Amazon.com/Books in Canada First Novel Award Shortlist: Fifteen years old and nursing a "serious case of outcastitis," Alice MacLeod is having a hard time finding anything much to like in small town Smithers, British Columbia. Her mom's a folk-festival hippie chick with a hair-trigger temper, her dad's a mild and reasonable sort of loser who hides out in the basement trying to write soft-core romance novels, and her last school counselor threw a teary fit in the middle of a session and left the profession entirely. She'd love to "get past what my father calls my 'knee-jerk dislike of just about anything,'" but she's not sure that there's anything out there that's worth it.

Alice, I Think, which was shortlisted for the 2001 Amazon/Books in Canada First Novel Award, collects a summer's worth of Alice's journals. The journals are filled with eye-rolling protests at the embarrassments and stupidities she finds herself surrounded with: her mother's drumming-circle friends, the therapeutic jargon her counselors use, the "total rip-off" that the Sea Monkeys offers in the back of comic books turn out to be. But Alice's sharp bark doesn't do much to conceal her lack of a bite. It's her mom, after all, not Alice, who gets into a fistfight with Linda, the town's feathered-hair teen thug, while Alice sits cringing in the family car. In fact, Alice has a sweet side, which she makes all the more endearing by getting all squirmy and ashamed whenever she reveals it. As a novel, her story meanders, in the way that journals will, and the jokes are often aimed at easy marks, but Alice's fierce ungainliness, and her unwillingness to surrender it to make her life any easier, make her struggles appealing. --Tom Nissley --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

From Publishers Weekly

Goethals does a superb turn as Alice, the alienated teen possessed of a biting sarcasm who stars in Juby's frequently hilarious novel. Providing the perfect air of intelligence tinged with teen angst, Goethals gives Alice's journal about her various travails an undercurrent of energy. Alice, who feels like a true misfit, has been home-schooled for years and will soon enter a public high school. Whether she's keenly critiquing her hippie mother's feminist friends (of the armpit-hair-growing, patchouli-wearing ilk), her father's slacker pals or her generally inept teachers and counselors, Alice offers a unique view of common teenage scenarios and complaints. She suffers at the hands of bullies, feels awkward around boys and longs to create a special "look" for herself, just like most kids her age. Her ever-present family is a source of love and comfort as well as embarrassment. But what makes this tale unusual is Alice's ability to see her everyday dramas in the context of a bigger picture of her life. Particularly entertaining are Goethals's spot-on mocking imitations of the overly caring or just plain daffy authority figures in Alice's life. Teens-and adults who remember their own teen years well-will find much to like here, including plenty of pop-culture references. Ages 12-up.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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Customer Reviews

18 Reviews
5 star:
 (9)
4 star:
 (1)
3 star:
 (3)
2 star:
 (2)
1 star:
 (3)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.6 out of 5 stars (18 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Alice, I think. I think this book is seriously muddled up., Aug 14 2004
By Laura Gee (North York, Toronto, Ontario, Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Alice I Think (Paperback)
Alice, I think, tells the story of a home schooled sociopath teenager, Alice, who grows up amidst a family of bizarre-ites. A brother whose passion in life is breeding fish, an intense hippie mother and a mellow romance-novel-writing father.

I have no knowledge of or experience with home schooled children and teens but I know that this is considered offensive to them. I imagine that they simply have parents who would rather shield them from the harsh reality of the violent, depressing world around us. I am jealous of them; I mean they end up as smart without dealing with all the trouble of high and middle school.

I honestly despised Alice and her personality in all aspects. The book completely lacked a plot and plotline. Her boyfriend that she picked up was a sickening character. There was no rising action, climax, or falling action. It was honestly one long line of a book.

Nevertheless I didn't put the book down from beginning to end... I kept expecting something to happen but I was completely disappointed, and, at the end, I was angry at myself for wasting two and a half hours of my life.

Still, it was some form of entertainment and I would recommend it to those of you who are sick of the typical teenager book that tells the strory of girls who end up happy ever after with perfect friends and boyfriends which completely deviate from the truth of teenagerhood.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Hilarious!, April 27 2005
By A Customer
I read this book is six hours, I loved it so much. The voice of Alice is so funny. The entire book is hilarious but it touches on more serious topics as well. Alice is basically out to fulfill her life goals that she sets out at the beginning of the book. And she does, in strange, comedic ways. The supporting cast of characters are entertaining as well. For a change, the setting is Canadian, which is a breath of fresh air after reading so much American and British fiction. Highly recommended. It will make you laugh out loud.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Excellently Written and Realistically Funny!, Mar 8 2005
By Stephanie Van Dyk (British Comlubia, Canada) - See all my reviews
I have heard it said that "Alice, I think" is a childish attempt at a book of a teenager's life. Some say it is unrealistic, and that the plot pieces included could never happen. Others declare that the humor was heavy handed and obvious. Still other people decide that Alice, the main charactor is stupid, childish and that her world is very, very wrongly portrayed. I disagree completely.

Having lived in a small town very much like Smithers, having visited there several times before and who's mother grew up in Terrace, a few hours away from Smithers, I can confidently say that, yes, this book shows exactly what Smithers is like. It's small, tight-knit, and, at times, just plain weird. Along with this, I can also affirm that the plot pieces, as they are told, may be slightly exaggerated, but actually do happen in rural British Columbia.

Also, since I am fifteen myself, and was homeschooled for a good portion of my life, I can say with confidence two things. First, Alice is realistic as a homeschooled teenager, acting like I have at times. I laugh at adults who read this book and say that it was an innacurate account of a teenager growing up. How would they know? I, a teenager myself, found it startlingly accurate. Second, this book is not making fun of or laughing at homeschooled children - it is laughing with them. Many people who have been homeschooled know that it does tend to leave one a little sheltered and shy, causing all sorts of humorous incidents.

I leave with these words - before making comments about any book at all, consider how you know them to be true. Sometimes, unless you have been in certain situations, you cannot accurately judge the authenticity of the author's account.

-Stephanie Van Dyk
British Columbia, Canada

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Most recent customer reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Great Story
I found more I could relate to in the Alice books then I would have thought was possible from any book. Read more
Published on Sep 26 2005 by Leah

1.0 out of 5 stars waste of my time
this is by far the worst book i have ever read. I hated the story line, there wasn't even a storyline. It makes no sense. Cheap Canadian book. Skip this one.
Published on July 24 2005

4.0 out of 5 stars Not so realistic but funny in its worth
Alice, I think is a great book, although not so realistic. Some of the situations Alice gets herself into seem to be not based on reality one bit, unlike some other books which... Read more
Published on Mar 26 2005 by Aarone

3.0 out of 5 stars Very Disappointing.
I picked up this book expecting a good story about a girl who made her way into regular school after all her school years of being home schooled. Read more
Published on Sep 13 2004

3.0 out of 5 stars There are better books out there...
"Alice, I Think" is an interesting book when it comes to sociological issues like fitting in, and dealing with who you are, but it's a bit heavy to be called hilarious... Read more
Published on Jun 14 2004 by Booky Bookerson

5.0 out of 5 stars Funny, Funny, Funny!!!
I couldn't help responding after reading the last two reviews. 'Alice, I Think' is not meant as a *research project*. Read more
Published on May 5 2004 by Maggie Wood

1.0 out of 5 stars Stupid book
I'm a thirteen-year-old homeschooler. I thought this book was terrible. Plain and simple, the word is terrible. Read more
Published on April 25 2004

1.0 out of 5 stars moms thoughts
As a homeschooling mother I was very disappointed with the portrait painted of homeschoolers in this book. Read more
Published on April 25 2004 by Julie

5.0 out of 5 stars fascinating, humorous, albeit wandering plot
I greatly enjoyed Susan Juby's debut novel "Alice, I Think". I did not put it down from start to finish. Read more
Published on April 14 2004

2.0 out of 5 stars Alice, immature
I first bought this book because it was from a Canadian author, and it's the type of book I like, ones that have teen problems. Read more
Published on Aug 19 2003 by Shayna

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