Reviews

Kill Me Now by Timmy Reed

melinareads's review against another edition

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3.0

Angst, skateboarding, and a really big snake. Timmy Reed’s writing takes you right back to that last, hot summer before high school. Mile’s life is full on long days skateboarding, sitting by the pool, watching the Animal Channel, and writing in his school required journal. Miles discovers that sometimes you find life lessons in the oddest of places and through the strangest of friends. Through his rambling yet poignant entries, and with the help of his elderly neighbor, who happens to be pet sitting a giant boa constrictor, you watch Miles grow up, discover true friendship, and find self acceptance. This book definitely will fill you with bittersweet memories of your teenage years and how you came into your own. A nostalgic must read for anyone who was once an angsty teenager.

see_sadie_read's review against another edition

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3.0

3.5

Being a 14-year-old boy must suck. Being a 14-year-old girl had it's challenges, being 14 in general does, but being a 14-year-old boy sounds like the pits. Such were my thoughts while reading Kill Me Now.

I liked this more than I expected. It reminded me A LOT of The Perks of Being a Wallflower. Though TPoBaWF has a certain gentleness that this lacks, there are a lot of similarities. Miles Lover isn't quite as cerebral as Charlie Scorsoni, but he engages in  the same kind of stream of consciousness writing to an unknown reader. He is the same kind of socially awkward that leaves you wondering if he's on the spectrum somewhere. And Kill Me Now puts a 14-year-old, not a child/not an adult into the same situations that people (and therefore their media) pretends they don't engage in—drugs, alcohol, sex, casual cruelty, etc. And like The Perks of Being a Wallflower this challenging of the national script is what I appreciated most about the book. Because I have never known youths to be as pure as people like to insist they are.

I was uncomfortable with the casual racism, repeated use of Retard as a nickname, and the overt sexualization of prepubescent girls. (This one bothered me a lot more than the 14-year-old giving Miles a BJ or the rumors that his 13-year-old sisters had done the same to someone else.) I understand Reed probably included these for a reason. But I don't know what it was. To showcase the poor decision-making of Miles and his friends, teens in general, maybe?

All in all, I think if you liked Chbosky's wallflower, you'll like this grittier version of the same idea. But if you didn't like The Perks of Being a Wallflower, I feel confident saying you won't like Kill Me Now either.
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