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Level Up by Gene Luen Yang
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Level Up (edition 2011)

by Gene Luen Yang, Thien Pham

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4803351,281 (3.7)14
Dennis, the son of Chinese immigrants, yearns to play video games like his friends and, upon his strict father's death, becomes obsessed with them but later, realizing how his father sacrificed for him, he chooses a nobler path.
Member:fuzzy_birds
Title:Level Up
Authors:Gene Luen Yang
Other authors:Thien Pham
Info:First Second (2011), Paperback, 160 pages
Collections:To read
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Tags:None

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Level Up by Gene Luen Yang (Author)

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» See also 14 mentions

Showing 1-5 of 33 (next | show all)
It's okay.... I felt like things where missing, so to speak. ( )
  Summer345456 | Jan 25, 2023 |


Charming. Yes, I'm going with the word charming to describe this graphic novel. Dennis Ouyang is a young boy fascinated by video games. After his father passes away, he buys his first video game system and falls in love with said video game.

But his parents always wanted him to become a doctor.

( )
  wellington299 | Feb 19, 2022 |
perfect for students feeling forced into a major or lovers of video games. ( )
  MorbidLibrarian | Sep 18, 2021 |
This is one of those stories that can only be told through its chosen medium, an exemplar of the form. I'm not sure I would have thought a "boy comes to term with his father's death through medical school and videogames" story could have been pulled off successfully, but there you go. It's heart-wrenching, redeeming, joyful and a little bit crazypants. ( )
  kaitwallas | May 21, 2021 |
Yang, known for his Prinz award winner, “American Born Chinese,” has written another graphic novel about parents and a child, of cultural expectations and communication gaps. In this novel, illustrated by Thien Pham, a young man named Dennis Ouyang struggles to live up to his parents’ expectations. As a child, his parents give him chemistry kits and pressure him to get good grades; after his father dies, Dennis tries to balance his love of gaming with his father’s wish that he become a doctor. Along the way, he has a little “help” from four specters who help him with housework, clean, cook, and nag him to continue studying.

Although this is a very short book, there is plenty to like about it. The storyline will appeal to any teen who has had to deal with parental pressure, the expectation of others, and the desire to please while still following one’s own interests. I found myself nodding along to some of the conversations that Dennis has with his parents, as well as scenes where we learn about their motives. Those who found Yang’s previous novel not quite to their liking may have a better appreciation of this one. ( )
  resoundingjoy | Jan 1, 2021 |
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Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Yang, Gene LuenAuthorprimary authorall editionsconfirmed
Pham, ThienIllustratormain authorall editionsconfirmed
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Dennis, the son of Chinese immigrants, yearns to play video games like his friends and, upon his strict father's death, becomes obsessed with them but later, realizing how his father sacrificed for him, he chooses a nobler path.

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