Available:*
Library | Collection | Collection | Call Number | Status |
---|---|---|---|---|
Searching... Beale Memorial Library (Kern Co.) | Searching... Unknown | Teen Fiction | YA FIC NESS PAT | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... California City Branch (Kern Co.) | Searching... Unknown | Teen Fiction | YA FIC NESS PAT | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Clovis Branch Library (Fresno Co.) | Searching... Unknown | Teen Fiction Area | NESS PA Rest | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Fowler Branch Library (Fresno Co.) | Searching... Unknown | Teen Fiction Area | NESS PA Rest | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Huron Branch Library (Coalinga-Huron) | Searching... Unknown | Young Adult Fiction | YA F NES | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Kingsburg Branch Library (Fresno Co.) | Searching... Unknown | Teen Fiction Area | NESS PA Rest | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... LeGrand Branch Library (Merced Co.) | Searching... Unknown | Young Adult Fiction | YA NES | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Madera Ranchos Library (Madera Co.) | Searching... Unknown | Young Adult Section | NESS | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Mariposa Branch Library (Mariposa Co.) | Searching... Unknown | Young Adult Fiction | YA NES | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Mcfarland Branch Library (Kern Co.) | Searching... Unknown | Teen Fiction | YA FIC NESS PAT | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Merced Main Library (Merced Co.) | Searching... Unknown | Young Adult Fiction | YA NES | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Pinedale Branch Library (Fresno Co.) | Searching... Unknown | Teen Fiction Area | NESS PA Rest | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Porterville Public Library (Porterville) | Searching... Unknown | Young Adult Fiction Area | YA NESS AR 4.6 | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Sunnyside Branch Library (Fresno Co.) | Searching... Unknown | Teen Fiction Area | NESS PA Rest | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Taft Branch Library (Kern Co.) | Searching... Unknown | Teen Fiction | YA FIC NESS PAT | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Visalia Library (Tulare Co.) | Searching... Unknown | Young Adult Area | YA FIC NESS PATRICK | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Wilson Road Branch (Kern Co.) | Searching... Unknown | Teen Fiction | YA FIC NESS PAT | Searching... Unknown |
Bound With These Titles
On Order
Summary
Summary
Six starred reviews!
A bold and irreverent YA novel that powerfully reminds us that there are many different types of remarkable, The Rest of Just Live Here is from novelist Patrick Ness, author of the Carnegie Medal- and Kate Greenaway Medal-winning A Monster Calls and the critically acclaimed Chaos Walking trilogy.
What if you aren't the Chosen One? The one who's supposed to fight the zombies, or the soul-eating ghosts, or whatever the heck this new thing is, with the blue lights and the death?
What if you're like Mikey? Who just wants to graduate and go to prom and maybe finally work up the courage to ask Henna out before someone goes and blows up the high school. Again.
Because sometimes there are problems bigger than this week's end of the world, and sometimes you just have to find the extraordinary in your ordinary life.
Even if your best friend is worshipped by mountain lions.
ALA Best Fiction for Young Adults * Cooperative Children's Book Center CCBC Choice * Michael Printz Award shortlist * Kirkus Best Book of the Year * VOYA Perfect Ten * NYPL Top Ten Best Books of the Year for Teens * Chicago Public Library Best Teen Books of the Year * Publishers Marketplace Buzz Books * ABC Best Books for Children * Bank Street Best Books List
Author Notes
Patrick Ness was born on October 17, 1971 near Fort Belvoir, Virginia. He studied English Literature and is a graduate of the University of Southern California. He was a corporate writer before moving to London in 1999. He taught creative writing at Oxford University and is a literary critic and reviewer for the Guardian and other major newspapers. He is the author of eight novels including The Rest of Us Just Live Here and a short story collection entitled Topics About Which I Know Nothing. His young adult novels include the Chaos Walking trilogy, More Than This, and Monsters of Men, which won the Carnegie Medal. A Monster Calls won the Kate Greenaway Medal for illustration, the Carnegie Medal, and was made into a movie and released in October 2016.
(Bowker Author Biography)
Reviews (7)
Publisher's Weekly Review
Having written both exquisite fantasies and heartbreaking contemporary stories, Ness (More Than This) forays into satire, and mostly succeeds, poking fun at the Chosen One trope-imagine a novel about Bella and Edward's classmates wrestling with exams, college admission, and unrequited love, with all those vampire/werewolf shenanigans as backdrop. Siblings Mikey and Melinda know something sinister is happening when the "indie kids" start dying in mysterious ways. Zombie deer and eerie blue pillars of light suggest apocalypse (again) in their remote town in Washington State, but they are busy trying to survive familial dysfunction (their father is an alcoholic, their mother a power-hungry politician) that has worsened Mikey's anxiety and given Mel an eating disorder. Their diverse circle of friends includes Henna (Mikey's crush) and Jared who is (secretly) part god. Each chapter opens with an ominous (and hilarious) synopsis about the imminent showdown between the Immortals and the hipster clique, and while the payoff after all the supernatural and emotional buildup is minimal, this is Mikey's story to tell and he's not trying to save the world, just himself. Ages 14-up. (Oct.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Horn Book Review
Nesss latest offering is a fantasy noveland simultaneously a fantasy-novel send-upwhose true focus is on its cast of innocent bystanders. Mikeys town is just like your town, except that every once in a while impossible things (the undead, vampires, soul-eating ghosts) invade it and are driven out by the heroic indie kids with unusual names and capital-D Destinies. This time, the invaders are Immortals with a mission to select someone as a permanent Vessel for their Empress in preparation for taking over the world. Brief chapter openings encapsulate these details, but the rest of each chapter tells whats happening to ordinary Mikey. He and his siblings and friends sometimes cross paths with the hero indie-kids but rarely take part in their adventures, which the main characters brush off as just another one of their crazy sagas. The novels tone, with its ripped-from-current-YA-fantasy indie-kid names (two Finns; a heroine named Satchel; lots of Dylans), encourages readers to view the Immortal invasion the same way. The narratives real weight is attached to the mostly realistic events surrounding Mikey: the loops that his OCD traps him in; his sister Mels severe eating disorder; the outside attention on the family because of his politician mom; a love quadrangle involving longtime friends and fluid sexualities. In this often-hilarious (and just as often poignant) parody of fantasy stories from Harrys to Buffys, not everyone is a Chosen One, but everyones got something; everybody matters. shoshana flax (c) Copyright 2015. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Booklist Review
*Starred Review* Mikey and his pals are about to graduate high school, right as the indie kids that group with the cool-geek haircuts and the thrift shop clothes start disappearing. It's not the first time this has happened: over his 18 years, Mikey's watched as the indie kids (they're always the Chosen Ones) battled the undead, defeated vampire suitors, and engaged in other world-saving activities. It's run-of-the-mill stuff at his high school, which has been blown up more than once. But right now, Mikey, perfectly normal, not-superpowered Mikey, has more pressing, if prosaic, things to worry about in the little time he has left before college namely, getting cozy with beautiful Henna, connecting with his sister, dealing with his paralyzing anxiety, and hanging with his best friend, who happens to be a God of Cats. Best-selling Ness has crafted a polished, lifelike world where the mundane moments are just as captivating as the extraordinary. Mikey and his friends are flawed, funny, and deeply human, yet the challenges they face mental illness, family trouble, jealousies, etc. are just as meaningful as the apocalypse-prevention the indie kids get up to. Ness' deadpan sci-fi novel pokes fun at far-fetched futuristic fantasies while emphasizing the important victories of merely living. This memorable, moving, and often hilarious read is sure to be a hit. HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: You don't have to have superpowers to recognize Ness' cachet in the YA scene.--Walters Wright, Lexi Copyright 2015 Booklist
New York Review of Books Review
AT MY TYPICAL public high school in an average-size town, I was surrounded by a lot of kids just like me - that is to say, no one had any special powers. There were no vampires. No witches. No werewolves or shape shifters or zombie fighters. No one was on a mission to save the world from the forces of evil. Mostly, we were learning to drive cars, trying to pass calculus, angling for the first glimmerings of what adult relationships might hold. We were teenagers, for all the beauty and mundanity in that. It was horrible, fantastic, brutal, magical and sometimes utterly boring. It was, in a word, life. In the last decade, young adult literature has experienced a floodlike rise in stories that are about more than simply the lives of typical teenagers. This is not necessarily a bad thing: The "chosen one" story line rampant in contemporary Y.A. is valuable and empowering because it reminds us that any of us could change the world. But there's another side to that coin, as Patrick Ness points out brilliantly in his new novel, "The Rest of Us Just Live Here": What about all the regular kids who aren't saving the planet from alien invaders or soul-eating ghosts? You know, the ones who are just trying to get their homework done on time? Mikey is one of those kids. In his anywhere-in-America small town - "a suburb of a suburb of a suburb of a suburb of a city that takes about an hour to get to" - he just wants to make it through the four and a half weeks until graduation. That doesn't mean his life is empty. Along with school and his job at "a steakhouse for cheap dates," he's harboring a huge crush on his friend Henna, who will soon depart on a mission trip to the Central African Republic, meaning he has precious little time to make his move. He's also keeping an eye on his older sister, Mel, who's recovering from anorexia, and his younger sister, Meredith, a possible genius and a rabid fan of the band Bolts of Fire (an important plot point later). He's being a best friend to Jared, who's kind of a cat whisperer (another important plot point later). And he's trying to cope with his increasingly paralyzing O.C.D., not to mention a politically driven-to-a-fault mom and an alcoholic dad. With all that on his plate, the weird stuff the "indie kids" - who have hilariously on-point names like Satchel and Finn and Kerouac - are up to is just another blip on the radar. "They've always got some story going on that they're the heroes of," Mikey explains. "The rest of us just have to live here, hovering around the edges, left out of it all, for the most part." It's a wonderfully meta conceit. Each chapter opens with a brief intro that cheekily references the familiar genre tropes - "Chapter the Second, in which indie kid Satchel writes a poem, and her mom and dad give her loving space to feel just what she needs to" - creating a satirical mini-chosen-one story within the story, a fight for the "Immortal Crux." The rest of the book is for Mikey and his friends, who mostly go about their business in their own ecosystem, where the appearance of a new classmate, a rival for Henna's affections, is as monumental as anything that's happening in the indie kids' story. While Ness packs his pages with wit (this is one of those novels that seem as if they were a joy to write), there's plenty of emotional heft in his turning of the genre tables. He reminds us that it's not a choice to be a chosen one, but it is in everyone's power to be a hero, by caring about others, by fighting to become your own truest self. In real life, of course, none of us are "chosen." As Jared tells Mikey, "Most people just have to live their lives the best they can, doing the things that are great for them, having great friends, trying to make their lives better, loving people properly. All the while knowing that the world makes no sense but trying to find a way to be happy anyway." That's a far more useful power than being able to defeat soul-eating ghosts, and you don't even have to be a chosen one to wield it. Ness reminds us that it's not a choice to be a 'chosen one,' but it is in everyone's power to be a hero. JEN DOLL is the author of "Save the Date: The Occasional Mortifications of a Serial Wedding Guest."
School Library Journal Review
Gr 9 Up-In this highly satiric exploration of the "chosen one" genre, an incredibly normal group of friends are approaching the end of high school and their parting of ways. Mikey is just trying to get through the year and hopefully ask his longtime crush to the prom. Similarly, each person in Mikey's close-knit circle of friends is battling a myriad of highly relatable issues: jealousy, various insecurities, and dysfunctional family relationships. The beginning of each chapter also contains an update in the concurrent story line centering on the "indie kids." These are Mikey and his pals' extraordinary peers, those from exceptional families who are exclusively chosen whenever there is a supernatural occurrence. They've fought off zombies and fallen in love with vampires, and now they're being targeted by the Immortals, a mysterious group looking for a permanent Vessel. In the end, Mikey and his friends come to grips with the ways in which they are both ordinary and extraordinary. This is a highly ambitious novel with an original concept, and the five main characters are all dealing with issues that will resonate with teens. Though the two plotlines don't always come together and readers used to more linear narratives might feel bombarded by information, the stream-of-consciousness narrative will please fans of Libba Bray's Going Bovine (Delacorte, 2009). VERDICT Fans of madcap humor and satire and those seeking more thought-provoking alternatives to the usual fare will appreciate this unique and clever take on a familiar trope.-Sunnie Lovelace, Wallingford Public Library, CT © Copyright 2015. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Guardian Review
Growing up with demigods and zombie deer, the 17-year-old narrator takes tentative steps towards adulthood in this smart, funny YA novel Patrick Ness's inner teenager is strong -- something the twice-Carnegie-winning author used to great effect in his outstanding Chaos Walking trilogy and, more recently, in his foray into the afterlife, More Than This. In his latest, more playful YA novel, Ness introduces us to Mikey, an anxious 17-year-old whose supple tone -- at once wry, perceptive and intimate -- keeps the pages turning. Mikey worries about the things everyone on the verge of adulthood worries about: love, relationships, sex, popularity, parents, the future, not to mention what it all means. He has a lot on his plate: his father is a drunk; an eating disorder nearly killed his sister; his mother is preoccupied with work; his grandmother has Alzheimer's disease; his feelings for his best friend Jared and the beautiful Henna confuse him. No wonder he struggles with an obsessive-compulsive disorder. But as if this weren't enough, in Ness's alternative world, Mikey also has the "Immortals" to contend with. He is hoping that the gods won't blow up his school -- again -- or that if they do, they'll at least wait until he's graduated. By turns hilarious and poignant, The Rest of Us Just Live Here is a novel that requires you to suspend your disbelief and enjoy the ride. In a narrative that features zombie deer, a demigod of cats and mountain lions, and mysterious pillars of blue light, Ness clearly has enormous fun with the fantasy tropes beloved of his audience. It is not straight satire, although there are satirical elements, his principal aim being to turn the ubiquitous "Chosen One" meme on its head. He neither denigrates nor condescendsrather, he constructs a story that puts "the chosen ones" in their place, consigning them, literally, to the margins of the action. "The indie kids, huh? You've got them at your school, too. That group with the cool-geek haircuts [...] who end up being the Chosen One when the vampires come calling [...] They've always got some story going on that they're heroes of. The rest of us just have to live here." The running joke is that while diverse paranormal manifestations -- while gods, vampires, soul-eating ghosts and so forth occasionally walk among us, the lives of regular mortals play out centre stage, as vital and fascinating as anything that might happen to the Immortals. The epic stuff mostly takes place in the wings, wreaking collateral damage here and there, but (other than the odd killing) it is nothing that the cool indie kids can't handle. Ness achieves this by subverting the chapter summary familiar from period novels, confining the travails of the chosen ones to a bare outline while the body of the chapter is devoted to the more earthly concerns of Mikey and those he loves. As Jared says: "Not everyone has to be the god who saves the world. Most people just have to live their lives the best they can ... trying to make their lives better, loving people properly." The story of Mikey's tentative steps towards maturity is affecting, while Ness's insightful portrayal of his wide-ranging anxiety taps straight into many teenagers' uncertainty about who they are and what the future holds for them. "We share our craziness, our neuroses," says Mikey. "And it feels like love." In this smart, funny and entertaining novel, Ness, who is never afraid to wear his heart on his sleeve, successfully challenges the notion that real life is elsewhere. * To order The Rest of Us Just Live Here for [pound]10.39 (RRP [pound]12.99) go to bookshop.theguardian.com or call 0330 333 6846. Free UK p&p over [pound]10, online orders only. Phone orders min p&p of [pound]1.99. - Linda Buckley-Archer.
Kirkus Review
It's not easy being normal when the Chosen One goes to your high school. High school senior Mikey Mitchell knows that he's not one of the "indie kids" in his small Washington town. While they "end up being the Chosen One when the vampires come calling or when the Alien Queen needs the Source of All Light or something," Mikey simply wants to graduate, enjoy his friendships, and maybe, just maybe, kiss his longtime crush. All that's easier said than done, however, thanks to his struggles with anxiety, his dreadful parents, and the latest group of indie kids discovering their "capital-D Destinies." By beginning each chapter with an arch summary of the indie kids' adventures before returning to Mikey's wry first-person narration, Ness offers a hilariousand perceptivecommentary on the chosen-one stories that are currently so popular in teen fiction. The diverse cast of characters is multidimensional and memorable, and the depiction of teen sexuality is refreshingly matter-of-fact. Magical pillars of light and zombie deer may occasionally drive the action here, but ultimately this novel celebrates the everyday heroism of teens doing the hard work of growing up. Fresh, funny, and full of heart: not to be missed. (Fantasy. 13 up) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.