Rayne & Delilah’s Midnite Matinee:
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11.99 JOD
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Description
“Anyone can break your heart–Jeff Zentner can also make you laugh out loud!” –RAINBOW ROWELL, #1 New York Times bestselling author of Carry On and Eleanor & ParkFrom the Morris Award-winning author of The Serpent King comes a contemporary novel about two best friends who must make tough decisions about their futures–and the TV show they host–in their senior year of high school.Every Friday night, best friends Delia and Josie become Rayne Ravenscroft and Delilah Darkwood, hosts of the campy creature feature show Midnite Matinee on the local cable station TV Six.But with the end of senior year quickly approaching, the girls face tough decisions about their futures. Josie has been dreading graduation, as she tries to decide whether to leave for a big university and chase her dream career in mainstream TV. And Lawson, one of the show’s guest performers, a talented MMA fighter with weaknesses for pancakes, fantasy novels, and Josie, is making her tough decision even harder. Scary movies are the last connection Delia has to her dad, who abandoned the family years ago. If Midnite Matinee becomes a hit, maybe he’ll see it and want to be a part of her life again. And maybe Josie will stay with the show instead of leaving her behind, too.As the tug-of-war between growing up and growing apart tests the bonds of their friendship, Josie and Delia start to realize that an uncertain future can be both monstrous…and momentous.”I laughed, cried, and fell over-the-moon in love with Rayne & Delilah’s Midnite Matinee.” –JENNIFER NIVEN, New York Times bestselling author of All the Bright Places and Holding Up the Universe”A testament to the power of friendship and big dreams, Rayne & Delilah’s Midnite Matinee had me laughing aloud on one page and sobbing on the next. A resounding triumph.” –NIC STONE, New York Times bestselling author of Dear Martin”Rayne & Delilah’s Midnite Matinee starts as comedy about the wildly imperfect, and ends as poetry about the ever-hoping heart. I don’t know how you write that book. Fortunately, Jeff Zentner does.” –JESSE ANDREWS, New York Times bestselling author of Me and Earl and the Dying Girl
Additional information
Weight | 0.32 kg |
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Dimensions | 2.18 × 13.46 × 3.72 cm |
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Format | Paperback |
Language | |
Pages | 416 |
Publisher | |
Year Published | 2020-3-3 |
Imprint | |
For Ages | 9 |
Publication City/Country | USA |
ISBN 10 | 1524720232 |
About The Author | Jeff Zentner is the author of The Serpent King, a New York Times Notable Book, winner of the William C. Morris Award, and recipient of many other accolades; and Goodbye Days, named an ALA-YALSA Top Ten Best Fiction for Young Adults title. Jeff was a Publishers Weekly Flying Start and an Indies Introduce pick. Rayne & Delilah's Midnite Matinee is his ode to best friends who make things together. He lives in Nashville with his wife and son. You can follow him on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram, or visit him at jeffzentnerbooks.com. |
One of Buzzfeed’s Best YA Books of the YearOne of Paste Magazine’s 10 Most Anticipated Young Adult Books of the Year"A testament to the power of friendship and big dreams, Rayne & Delilah's Midnite Matinee had me laughing aloud on one page and sobbing on the next. A resounding triumph." –NIC STONE, New York Times bestselling author of Dear Martin"Rayne & Delilah's Midnite Matinee starts as comedy about the wildly imperfect, and ends as poetry about the ever-hoping heart. I don't know how you write that book. Fortunately, Jeff Zentner does." –JESSE ANDREWS, New York Times bestselling author of Me and Earl and the Dying Girl"As in his award-winning The Serpent King (2016), Zentner packs a poignantly satisfying blend of wit and pathos, with lovable and unpredictable characters. . . . Readers looking for an unforgettable slice of small-town angst will love this one." –Starred Review, Booklist"Zentner’s quick-witted, charming characters tackle real-life issues with snappy dialogue and engaging levity." –Starred Review, Publishers Weekly"Zentner nails his teen characters, their longings, and their motivations, and the first chapters are downright hilarious." –Kirkus Reviews"[A] heartfelt story of a friendship in transition, fueled by funny, rapid-fire dialogue." –Horn Book"A quirky fun, read that will give teens all the feels." –School Library Journal"[W]ill no doubt offer hope to readers who want to stay friends when post–high school plans take them in very different directions." — The Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books"As funny as it is bittersweet." –Shelf AwarenessPRAISE FOR Goodbye Days:"Jeff Zentner, you perfectly fill the John-Green-sized hole in our heart."–Justine Magazine“Evocative, heartbreaking, and beautifully written." –Buzzfeed"Zentner does an excellent job in creating empathetic characters, especially his protagonist Carver, a budding writer whose first-person account of his plight is artful evidence of his talent." Starred Review, Booklist"Racial tensions, spoiled reputations, and broken homes all play roles in an often raw meditation on grief and the futility of entertaining what-ifs when faced with awful, irreversible events." –Starred Review, Publishers Weekly"[E]xquisite and tragic." –Starred Review, Shelf Awareness"An organic, frequently raw narrative." –Horn BookPRAISE FOR The Serpent King:A William C. Morris Award WinnerA New York Times Notable BookA Kirkus Reviews Best Book of the YearA Publishers Weekly Best Book of the YearA BuzzFeed Best YA Book of the YearAn Indie Next List Top Ten SelectionA Paste Magazine and popcrush.com Most Anticipated YA Book of the YearA Publishers Weekly Spring 2016 Flying Start“Will fill the infinite space that was left in your chest after you finished The Perks of Being a Wallflower.” –BookRiot“As funny and witty as it is utterly heartbreaking.” –Paste Magazine“A love letter to the South from a man who really understands it.” –Mashable“Zentner’s great achievement — particularly impressive for a first novel — is to make us believe three such different people could be friends. He also manages to blend a dank, oppressive, Flannery O’Connor-esque sense of place with humor and optimism …. I adored all three of these characters and the way they talked to and loved one another.” –New York Times Book Review |
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Excerpt From Book | Josie Here’s the thing with dreams–and I’m talking about the kind you have when you sleep, not the kind where you’re finally learning to surf when you’re fifty: they’re carefully tailored to the only audience who will ever see them, which is you. So I’m not big on telling people about my dreams for that reason. That said, there’s this recurring dream I have. It comes around every couple of months or so, but I wish it were more often because it’s awesome, and when I wake up from it, I lie there for a few moments, wishing I could reenter it. In this dream, I’m at a familiar place. Often it’s my grandma’s house. Her house was tiny. It always smelled like quilts and oatmeal cookies and that musty odor when you first turn on a window-unit air conditioner after winter. It had a cellar that smelled like cold dirt even during the summer, where she kept store-brand cans of creamed corn, jars of home-pickled dilly beans, and two-liter bottles of Diet Coke. In my dream, I descend into the cellar. I find a door leading to a passageway. I go in. I follow it for a long way; it’s cool and dark, and I’m not afraid. Eventually it opens into this grand, palatial, brightly lit marble room. There are columns and fountains, and the air smells like flowers. I push forward and find room after room. It’s all grand and glorious, beautiful and perfect. It’s not what you would expect to find. But there it is, and for those few minutes (I’ve heard that dreams are never more than five minutes long, which I totally don’t believe, but whatever), you get to experience the most unexpected grandeur, running like a rabbit warren under my grandma’s little house in Jackson, Tennessee. And then I wake up, the thrill of possibility and discovery drifting upward off me like steam. It’s such a delicious feeling. Just stay a little longer, I say. But it doesn’t. Yet another reason it sucks to tell people about your dreams is that then they suddenly become amateur dream interpretation experts: [Nondescript German psychiatrist voice] Well, you see, when you were riding that bicycle made out of fish sticks while wearing an adult diaper, it symbolizes . . . That you’re afraid of failure. That you’re filled with seething rage. That you’re afraid to become such a grown-up that you no longer call fish sticks “fish dicks.” Who knows? But dreams are their own universe. They exist in you, and you’re the God of that universe, so no one can tell you what they mean. You have to figure it out, assuming dreams have any meaning at all, which I think they only sometimes do. This dream, though–the one about finding all the hidden rooms–I think it does mean something. I think it means there’s something great inside me, something extraordinary and mysterious and undiscovered. That’s a thing I tell myself. It’s a thing I believe. |
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