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The Last Invisible Boy

by Evan Kuhlman

The Last Invisible Boy Cover

ISBN13: 9781416957973
ISBN10: 1416957979
All Product Details

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Synopses & Reviews

Publisher Comments:

MY NAME IS FINN GARRETT AND THIS IS MY STORY.

I don't want to give anything away, so I'll tell you what you could probably guess from looking at the cover and flipping through the book.

1. It's about an invisible boy. Obviously. That's me. Actually, I'm not totally invisible. Yet. But I'm getting there.

2. There are a bunch of my drawings.

3. There are some really funny, really happy moments.

4. Just so you know, there are also some sad moments.

5. Everything in here is the truth. So if you like stories about true things, you might like this book.

That's all I'm going to tell you. All the stuff about my dad and my mom and my brother Derek and my friend Meli and whether or not I actually turn invisible or become completely visible again or figure out how to use my invisibility for the good of all mankind or just disappear altogether, you're going to have to read to find out.

So, let's get started. Just remember: This is my story, and anything can happen.

Review:

"Were Jeff Kinney's Wimpy Kid to be suddenly bereaved, his next diary might approximate this painful but often funny novel, written by the author of the adult work Wolf Boy and illustrated by a debut graphic artist. Keeping a notebook, 12-year-old Finn Garrett explains in an early entry that a few months before, 'a giant eraser fell from the sky and flattened me.... It's been erasing me from the world ever since.' His father has died unexpectedly (in circumstances described only near the end), and Finn's black hair and pink complexion are gradually turning white (Coovert's cartoon shows a gray Finn looking into a mirror and seeing a vampire reflected back). As Finn remembers perfect moments with his father, avoids school as long as possible and compares his mother's and paternal grandfather's attitudes about death, he is made to see his pediatrician as well as a kindly school psychologist, who have their own theories about the 'whiteness thing.' Precise in his metaphors and his characterizations, Kuhlman delivers a study in coping with loss that middle-schoolers will want to absorb and empathize with. Ages 10 — 14." Publishers Weekly (Starred Review) (Copyright Reed Business Information, Inc.)

Synopsis:

Everything for Finn Garrett changed after he lost his dad forever. The next morning, a strand of Finn's hair had turned white, and his skin lost some of its pinkness. Now nearly half his hair is white and his skin as pale as a ghost. Finn is certain he'll disappear altogether. Illustrations.

What Our Readers Are Saying

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Average customer rating based on 1 comment:

brainlair, February 21, 2009 (view all comments by brainlair)
Meet Finn. He's slowly fading. His hair is getting whiter. His skin is paler. And he doesn't want to go to school or see people or do any of the things he used to do before The Terrible Day That Changed Everything.

Finn has this thing for name meanings. Findlay stands for "fair hero". Finn doesn't feel like a hero, he feels like a failure. He wasn't able to stop The Terrible Day That Changed Everything. Maybe that's why he's disappearing. So in a combination present-day journal/everyday story Finn tells us about his life now and then.

That's really all I can tell you because the story depends on you reading it. Finn talks to you. He shares with you. He waits for you. He wants to tell you about his family and his hopefully one day soon girlfriend but right now best friend Meli.

The Last Invisible Boy is sad and hopeful and beautiful.

There were so many lines to write down and remember:

p. 5 - I'm vanishing in bits and pieces, like a disease that will not kill me but will erase me.

p. 36 - I love happy endings. I just wish there were more of them.

p. 44 - Most people think that Meli is my girlfriend, probably because I tell them she's my girlfriend...

p. 95 - Here's something I know. I'd give the whole world...for one more visit with my dad...

It's just so simple and moving. You should read it. Go ahead. I'll be here when you get back.
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Product Details

ISBN:
9781416957973
Author:
Kuhlman, Evan
Publisher:
Ginee Seo Books
Illustrator:
Coovert, Jp
Author:
Coovert, Jp
Subject:
Fathers and sons
Subject:
Grief
Subject:
Social Issues - Death & Dying
Subject:
Family - Parents
Subject:
Social Issues - Emotions & Feelings
Subject:
Situations / Death & Dying
Subject:
Schools
Subject:
Children s Young Adult-Social Issue Fiction-Death and Dying
Subject:
Children s Young Adult-Social Issue Fiction
Publication Date:
20081031
Binding:
HARDCOVER
Grade Level:
Children/juvenile
Language:
English
Illustrations:
YES
Pages:
240
Dimensions:
8.25 x 5.5 in
Age Level:
10-12

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Related Subjects

Children's » General
Children's » Middle Readers » General
Languages » Foreign Languages » Spanish » Children's » General
Languages » Foreign Languages » Spanish » Young Adult » Fiction » Social Issues » Death and Dying
Languages » Foreign Languages » Spanish » Young Adult » Fiction » Social Issues » Emotions and Feelings
Young Adult » Fiction » Social Issues » Death and Dying
Young Adult » Fiction » Social Issues » Emotions and Feelings

The Last Invisible Boy New Hardcover
0 stars - 0 reviews
$16.99 In Stock
Product details 240 pages Ginee Seo Books - English 9781416957973 Reviews:
"Publishers Weekly Review" by , "Were Jeff Kinney's Wimpy Kid to be suddenly bereaved, his next diary might approximate this painful but often funny novel, written by the author of the adult work Wolf Boy and illustrated by a debut graphic artist. Keeping a notebook, 12-year-old Finn Garrett explains in an early entry that a few months before, 'a giant eraser fell from the sky and flattened me.... It's been erasing me from the world ever since.' His father has died unexpectedly (in circumstances described only near the end), and Finn's black hair and pink complexion are gradually turning white (Coovert's cartoon shows a gray Finn looking into a mirror and seeing a vampire reflected back). As Finn remembers perfect moments with his father, avoids school as long as possible and compares his mother's and paternal grandfather's attitudes about death, he is made to see his pediatrician as well as a kindly school psychologist, who have their own theories about the 'whiteness thing.' Precise in his metaphors and his characterizations, Kuhlman delivers a study in coping with loss that middle-schoolers will want to absorb and empathize with. Ages 10 — 14." Publishers Weekly (Starred Review) (Copyright Reed Business Information, Inc.)
"Synopsis" by , Everything for Finn Garrett changed after he lost his dad forever. The next morning, a strand of Finn's hair had turned white, and his skin lost some of its pinkness. Now nearly half his hair is white and his skin as pale as a ghost. Finn is certain he'll disappear altogether. Illustrations.
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