Mock Printz 2026 discussion

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The Rest of Us Just Live Here
Mock Printz 2016
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The Rest of Us Just Live Here by Patrick Ness
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Jenna
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rated it 3 stars
Nov 01, 2015 07:06AM

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I saw many people give The Rest of Us 4 or 5 stars, but honestly, they must have read a completely different book than I did. I'm sorry to say but it was just boring. What if you're not 'the chosen one'...interesting premise, but then what? Nothing much happens here.
Okay, so if you have a more or less plotless book, it's up to' the characters' to make it interesting to read. But the characters are, you know, dull, undeveloped. Boring.
I honestly can't see this as a Printz contender. If anything, Ness should have gotten that with Chaos Walking (Knife or Monsters of Men). Too bad he was still very much 'under the radar' in the States back then.

This book is under 350 pages and there are about nine characters but they are all different and well developed. Our main character, Mikey, suffers from OCD and his condition worsens as issues such as his parents, his siblings, his love interest, and his friendships arise. I recently read a different book that was all about OCD but I felt that Ness’ writing captured the essence of the disorder even though it was one of many themes in this book. Jacob is gay but the book doesn’t make a big deal out of it. It makes a big deal out of Jacob’s big heart and that he’s a wonderful friend.
It’s a good story for teens who feel like the least liked among their group of friends, which I think all of us have experienced even as adults. It’s not one of those stories where the teen suddenly has a life epiphany; it’s a story about a boy who has issues and asks an adult for help-which is realistic. I like to think Ness did this on purpose seeing as many sci-fi books feature sixteen year olds who know everything and figure it all out by themselves.
If there were 10 nominees, I think this would have a solid chance because of the voice. I don't think it will make it to the top four.




I loved the parallel story of the indie kids being told through the elaborate chapter titles before Ness brings it into the narrative itself. The plot of the book may not be the most exciting, but it has a definite arc to it. The theme of finding extraordinary in the ordinary is well done.
I don't think it will garner any medals, but it definitely has literary merit.
