What's It All About?
In Going Bovine, we are introduced to Cameron who describes his best day ever as the day he was 5 and almost died at the It’s a Small World ride at Disney. He is just trying to make it through high school as the “lesser twin.” His sister is part of the cool kids and concerned with her grades while Cameron doesn't see the point in trying so hard. Then he receives a diagnosis of Mad Cow Disease. In order to find the cure, he sets off on an adventure with a host of wacky characters looking for random signs and a mysterious time traveling Doctor X.
What'd I Think?
Damn you, Libba Bray! You hit me right in the feels every time. This book is a twisting and turning quixote-like journey that kept me asking what was real and what was fake, and whether or not Cameron would make it through. With his sidekick, Gonzo, by his side surely, he can't fail!
I give it 5 out of 5 stars!
What'd They Think?
Publishers Weekly -
(August 03, 2009; 9780385733977)
Cameron Smith, 16, is slumming
through high school; overshadowed by a sister "pre-majoring in
perfection," while working (ineptly) at the Buddha Burger. Then something
happens to make him the focus of his family's attention: he contracts mad cow
disease. What takes place after he is hospitalized is either that a gorgeous
angel persuades him to search for a cure that will also save the world, or that
he has a vivid hallucination brought on by the disease. Either way, what
readers have is an absurdist comedy in which Cameron, Gonzo (a neurotic dwarf)
and Balder (a Norse god cursed to appear as a yard gnome) go on a quixotic road
trip during which they learn about string theory, wormholes and true love en
route to Disney World. Bray's surreal humor may surprise fans of her historical
fantasies about Gemma Doyle, as she trains her satirical eye on modern
education, American materialism and religious cults (the smoothie-drinking
members of the Church of Everlasting Satisfaction and Snack 'N' Bowl). Offer
this to fans of Douglas Adams's Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy seeking more
inspired lunacy. Ages 14-up. (Sept.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights
reserved.
Booklist -
(August 01, 2009; 9780385904117)
*Starred Review* In a giant
departure from her Gemma Doyle historical fiction trilogy, Bray's latest
offering is an unforgettable, nearly indefinable fantasy adventure, as immense
and sprawling as Cervantes' Don Quixote, on which it's based. Here the hero is
Cameron, a 16-year-old C-plus-average slacker who likens himself to driftwood,
but he suddenly becomes the center of attention after he is diagnosed with
Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, the human variant of mad cow disease. In the
hospital, he meets Dulcie, an alluring angel clad in fishnet stockings and
combat boots, who presents him with a heroic quest to rescue the planet from an
otherworldly, evil force. Guided by random signs and accompanied by a teen
dwarf named Gonzo, Cameron sets off on a wild road trip across the U.S. to save
the world, and perhaps his own life. Talking yard gnomes, quantum physics,
cults of happiness, mythology, religion, time travel, the blues, Disney World,
the vacuous machine behind reality TV shows, and spring break's beer-and-bikini
culture all figure prominently in the plot, and readers may not feel equally engaged
in each of the novel's lengthy episodes. But Bray's wildly imagined novel,
narrated in Cameron's sardonic, believable voice, is wholly unique, ambitious,
tender, thought-provoking, and often fall-off-the-chair funny, even as she
writes with powerful lyricism about the nature of existence, love, and death.
Familiarity with Don Quixote certainly isn't necessary, but those who know the
basic plot will want to start over from the beginning and pick up on each sly
allusion to the classic story.--Engberg, Gillian Copyright 2009 Booklist.
What Do I Do With It?
Students will take a poster-size map of the United States and chart Cameron's epic journey with clip art and photos from pivotal stops along the way. They can enhance the map in anyway they like as long as they make sure to stick to the path listed in the book.
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