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Grasshopper Jungle

Book Resume

for Grasshopper Jungle by Andrew Smith

Professional book information and credentials for Grasshopper Jungle.

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Sixteen-year-old Austin Szerba, living in the small town of Ealing, Iowa, has a problem: ...read more

  • School Library Journal:
  • Grades 10 and up
  • Kirkus:
  • Ages 14 and up
  • Booklist:
  • Grades 9 - 12
  • Publisher's Weekly:
  • Ages 14 and up
  • TeachingBooks:*
  • Grades 9-12
  • Word Count:
  • 100,976
  • Lexile Level:
  • 910L
  • ATOS Reading Level:
  • 6.2
  • Cultural Experience:
  • LGBTQ+
  • Genre:
  • Adventure
  • Humor
  • Realistic Fiction
  • Science Fiction / Fantasy
  • Year Published:
  • 2014

The following unabridged reviews are made available under license from their respective rights holders and publishers. Reviews may be used for educational purposes consistent with the fair use doctrine in your jurisdiction, and may not be reproduced or repurposed without permission from the rights holders.

Note: This section may include reviews for related titles (e.g., same author, series, or related edition).

From Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC)

Sixteen-year-old Austin Szerba, living in the small town of Ealing, Iowa, has a problem: He’s in love with two different people. One of them is his girlfriend, Shann Collins. The other is his best friend, Robby Brees. He hasn’t told anyone about his feelings for Robby, but he thinks about having sex with Robby, as well as with Shann. A lot. Early on, Andrew Smith’s novel is notable for its deft and sensitive handling of these deeply held feelings in the voice of an irreverent and funny adolescent narrator. And then come the Unstoppable Soldiers. They’re an invading army of giant grasshopper-like creatures that emerge from humans who’ve been infected with a virus developed decades before in a now-defunct research laboratory outside Ealing. Austin describes the series of events that unleash the virus and what happens afterward in a narrative that seamlessly weaves the end of the world as we know it into the story of his simultaneous love for two people that the world as we know it will not allow. It’s a sophisticated, stellar blend of science fiction, social commentary, and adolescent angst. It’s also a B-movie horror tale that makes fun of B movies, and an adolescent fantasy with characters that are surprisingly multidimensional and nuanced. Austin’s account invites readers to question society and individuals, humanity and history, and even — or especially — the reliability and perspective of the narrator telling the story. Smith’s novel is smart, entertaining, and challenging in all the best ways. (Age 14 and older)

CCBC Choices 2015 © Cooperative Children's Book Center, Univ. of Wisconsin - Madison, 2015. Used with permission.

From Horn Book

July 1, 2014
Unfortunate coincidences involving sixteen-year-old Austin and his best friend Robby lead to the unleashing of gigantic, ravenous praying mantises related to a diabolical scientist's decades-old experiments. Austin's love for and attraction to both his girlfriend and to Robby is the powerful emotional backbone of this intricate, grimly comedic apocalypse story, in which Smith proves himself a daring and original wordsmith.

(Copyright 2014 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

From School Library Journal

Starred review from February 1, 2014

Gr 10 Up-It used to be that the only interesting events to occur in crumbling Ealing, Iowa happened between the pages of 16-year-old Austin Szerba's "history" journals. Austin's journals are elaborate and uncensored records about sex; his love for his girlfriend, Shann; his growing attraction for his best friend, Robby; his unique Polish ancestors; even Ealing's decrepit mini-mall where he and Robby hang out. Shann tells Austin, "I love how, whenever you tell a story, you go backwards and forwards and tell me everything else that could possibly be happening in every direction, like an explosion." And that's exactly how Austin narrates the end of the world when a twist of fate sparks the birth of mutant, people-eating praying mantises. Austin not only records the hilarious and bizarre tale of giant, copulating bugs but his own sexual confusion and his fear about hurting the people he loves. Award-winning author Smith has cleverly used a B movie science fiction plot to explore the intricacies of teenage sexuality, love, and friendship. Austin's desires might garner buzz and controversy among adults but not among the teenage boys who can identify with his internal struggles. This novel is proof that when an author creates solely for himself-as Smith notes in the acknowledgments section-the result is an original, honest, and extraordinary work that speaks directly to teens as it pushes the boundaries of young adult literature.-Kimberly Garnick Giarratano, Rockaway Township Public Library, NJ

Copyright 2014 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

From Kirkus

Starred review from December 1, 2013
A meanderingly funny, weirdly compelling and thoroughly brilliant chronicle of "the end of the world, and shit like that." This is not your everyday novel of the apocalypse, though it has the essential elements: a (dead) mad scientist, a fabulous underground bunker, voracious giant praying mantises and gobs of messy violence. As narrated by hapless Polish-Iowan sophomore Austin Szerba, though, the "shit like that" and his love for it all take center stage: his family, including his older brother, whose testicles and one leg are blown off in Iraq; his mute, perpetually defecating golden retriever; the dead-end town of Ealing, Iowa; his girlfriend, Shann Collins, whom he desperately wants to have sex with; and most importantly, his gay best friend, Robby Brees, to whom he finds himself as attracted as he is to Shann. His preoccupation with sex is pervasive; the unlikeliest things make Austin horny, and his candor in reporting this is endearing. In a cannily disjointed, Vonnegut-esque narrative, the budding historian weaves his account of the giant-insect apocalypse in and around his personal family history and his own odyssey through the hormonal stew that is adolescence. He doesn't lie, and he is acutely conscious of the paradox that is history: "You could never get everything in a book. / Good books are always about everything." By that measure, then, this is a mighty good book. It is about everything that really matters. Plus voracious giant praying mantises. (Science fiction. 14 & up)

COPYRIGHT(2013) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

From Booklist

November 15, 2013
Grades 9-12 Simmering within Ealing, Iowa, is a deadly genetically engineered plague capable of unleashing unstoppable soldierssix-foot-tall praying mantises with insatiable appetites for food and sex. No one knows it, of course, until Austin and his best friend Robby accidentally release it on the world. An ever-growing plague of giant, flesh-hungry insects is bad enough, but Austin is also up to his eyeballs in sexual confusionis he in love with Robby or his girlfriend, Shann? Both of them make him horny, but most things do. In an admittedly futile attempt to capture the truth of his history, painfully honest Austin narrates the events of the apocalypse intermingled with a detailed account of the connections that spiderweb through time and place, leading from his great-great-great-grandfather Andrzej in Poland to Shann's lucky discovery of an apocalypse-proof bunker in her new backyard. Smith (Winger, 2013) is up to his old tricks, delivering a gruesome sci-fi treat, a likable punk of a narrator, and a sucker punch ending that satisfyingly resolves everything and nothing in the same breath.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2013, American Library Association.)

From Publisher's Weekly

Starred review from November 4, 2013
Assuming the role of a historian (a wildly obscene historian), 16-year-old Austin Szerba chronicles the end of the world as it begins in his small Iowa town. Austin is in love with two people-his girlfriend, Shann, and his best friend Robby; neither of them is okay with it but, as Austin frequently repeats, "I was so confused." This confusion worsens when a series of missteps results in the propagation of six-foot tall, superstrong, mantislike Unstoppable Soldiers that portend a new world order on Earth. Sex is everywhere in this novel (only some of it involving humans), but Smith (Winger) describes it in purposefully clinical and utterly unromantic terms, making connections between the Unstoppable Soldiers-who "wanted only to fuck and eat"-and human beings, whose preoccupations aren't, perhaps, so different. Filled with gonzo black humor, Smith's outrageous tale makes serious points about scientific research done in the name of patriotism and profit, the intersections between the personal and the global, the weight of history on the present, and the often out-of-control sexuality of 16-year-old boys. Ages 14—up. Agent: Michael Bourret, Dystel & Goderich Literary Management.

From AudioFile Magazine

Oh, the complications of being a teenager! Falling in love with your two best friends, one female, one male, then accidentally unleashing a plague that causes the end of the world. Philip Church narrates Smith's novel with blunt tones, presenting a Vonnegut-like tale with straightforward prose. It works perfectly. The outlandishness of people turning into giant, murderous praying mantises is somehow perfectly balanced by the painful honesty of the teenage heart. Church takes the short, declarative sentences and, by simply performing them with a rapid, matter-of-fact delivery, captures the quick wit and sly thoughtfulness of the novel. Although Church has great energy and charm, be warned: The story's narrator swears like a sailor. G.D. © AudioFile 2014, Portland, Maine

Grasshopper Jungle was selected by educational and library professionals to be included on the following state/provincial reading lists.

United States Lists (3)

Michigan

New Jersey

  • Garden State Teen Book Awards, 2017 -- High School Fiction for Grades 9-12

Texas

  • Tayshas Reading List, 2015, for Grades 9-12

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This Book Resume for Grasshopper Jungle is compiled from TeachingBooks, a library of professional resources about children's and young adult books. This page may be shared for educational purposes and must include copyright information. Reviews are made available under license from their respective rights holders and publishers.

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