Selected Product: | The Good Times Are Killing Me Paperback Author: Lynda Barry Publisher: Sasquatch Books Release Date: 2002-01-04 ISBN-10: 157061105X ISBN-13: 9781570611056 List Price: $12.95 Average Customer Rating: | | What It Is ISBN-10: 1897299354 ISBN-13: 9781897299357 List Price:$24.95 One Hundred Demons ISBN-10: 1570614598 ISBN-13: 9781570614590 List Price:$17.95 CRUDDY: An Illustrated Novel ISBN-10: 068483846X ISBN-13: 9780684838465 List Price:$15.00 The Greatest of Marlys ISBN-10: 1570612609 ISBN-13: 9781570612602 List Price:$15.95 The Freddie Stories: With the Great Marlys! and Sister Maybonne ISBN-10: 1570611068 ISBN-13: 9781570611063 List Price:$12.95 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for The Good Times Are Killing Me by Lynda Barry (ISBN-10: 157061105X, ISBN-13: 9781570611056). At this time we have not yet written a review for The Good Times Are Killing Me by Lynda Barry (ISBN-10: 157061105X, ISBN-13: 9781570611056). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com
Nationally syndicated cartoonist Lynda Barry's moving, quirky, and honest first novel about a young girl's coming of age-which has also been a hit off-Broadway play-is back in print, with new artwork by the author. a gem of childhood | Customer Rating: | It won't take you long to finish this book of vignettes that weave together into a complete story. Yet, it is a book of incredible wisdom and courage, seen through the eyes of a young girl who lives in a neighborhood that is settling in after "white flight." Through the narrator's perspective, Lynda Barry palpably demonstrates the impact of racial integration and tension via the friendship between a young white girl and young black girl. Is such a friendship possible, when you have a "no Negroes allowed inside" rule at your house? Or when you visit the projects with your friend, and a boy calls her "Unca Tom" merely for being with a white girl? And what happens when girls grow up and graduate out of grade school?
Lynda Barry has the voice of the young girl down perfectly, expressing the things that young girls think and worry about, including the angst and dreams of fitting in and belonging. Bittersweet and compelling, I highly recommend this simple coming-of-age tale.
| Book is great. But Lynda Barry's looks are killing me. | Customer Rating: | | I don't know how Ira Glass steeled himself to enter this cavernous beast. Somebody give him a medal for bravery! | Great book where music is a prime force | Customer Rating: | I teach a course on teaching music for children (at the college level). I use this book to get students thinking about the deep ways that music impacts our lives. Situations from family to school music, private to public, and informal to formal are all present, and Barry's wonderful attention to detail brings each to life in a way that make my students talkative.
Of course, I wouldn't use it if it weren't a wonderful novel as well. It is. The story that is told is gripping, and my students love reading it. | another amazing feat.... | Customer Rating: | | Barry just knows how to get into the psyche of kids, adolescents, anyone under the age of 17, it seems. This book is a quick read, but a delicious one. Barry writes her characters' voices in as understated and realistic pieces of life, and she does what she's so good at doing: she puts readers in a space in which they're none too comfortable, and yet they can't seem to shake the familiar feelings of their own childhood horrors and experiences. This book is unsettling and slightly worrisome, and also truthful and wonderful, just as children often are. | A must-read. | Customer Rating: | | This is the book that got me started on my Lynda Barry addiction. I stumbled on to this book by fortuitous accident. It's brilliant. It is simple in its style with a reach deep into the heart of complex feelings and issues. While not as riveting as Cruddy, it is more moving and realistic. I hope Lynda Barry continues to produce work of this quality. One Hundred Demons is also extremely good. Her fiction is great literature on a transcendent level. |
|