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Stoner & Spaz by Ron Koertge
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Stoner & Spaz

by Ron Koertge

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2431723,176 (3.69)15
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Candlewick (2004), Paperback, 176 pages

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Stoner & Spaz tells the story of the unlikely friendship between Ben, an isolated loner with cerebral palsy, and Colleen, a punk rocker with a drug problem.

The depictions of high school subcultures ring hollow; Koertge's on surer ground with the film scene Ben gets into. Still, it's nice to see a nuanced, sensitive depiction of both druggies and disabled kids.

Drug use and sexual content make this a better recommendation for high school readers. ( )
  megmcg624 | Dec 6, 2009 |
I loved this book so much I can read it again and again also there's pros and con's to everything. It was a very powerful book that can relate to many teens lives. The part of the book that I most admired is when colleen opened up to Ben despite his handicapped and how she fell for him anyway. If I had to choose I'd have to give it 5 stars.
  koertagefan | Aug 22, 2009 |
You have to love Ben Bancroft. He is 16 years old with cerebral palsy, his mother abandoned him, his father may have committed suicide, and his grandmother dresses him in preppy clothes. But he has a killer sense of humor, honed in the last dark rows of the Rialto Theatre in Los Angeles, and refers to himself as “spaz.” By page four, he has bumped into Colleen Mintou; “Everybody at King High School knows Colleen. At least, everybody who wants weed.” Plus, she looks like Helena Bonham Carter in Fight Club.

Full review:
http://www.twentybyjenny.com/teenBook... ( )
  20XJenny | Aug 9, 2009 |
The spaz is a 17 year old boy with cerebral palsy whose life begins to change after a teenage girl with a drug problem and drug dealer boyfriend leans on his shoulder and sleeps during a showing of The Bride of Frankenstein. They seem to be polar opposites, but they somehow make a romantic connection and leave an imprint on each other's lives. One for the better and one for the slightly better.
  minnievasquez | Jul 14, 2009 |
i think this book is aweome. two totally different people endup hanging out together and end up being friends. i think that this is kind of showing you how oposites attract. it also shows what people go through like exs and the jealousy factor. its just an awesome book i think that the author of this book did agreat job and i love the format of this book it makes it really easy to read. ( )
  -AlyssaE- | May 24, 2009 |
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Since I've been pretty much treading water all day, the marquee of the Rialto Theater looks like the prow of a ship coming to save me.
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Book description

Amazon.com (ISBN 0763621501, Paperback)

Colleen Minou is a hard-core stoner, a girl whose motto is, "I'll get high and do anything." Ben Bancroft is a movie-addicted preppie who suffers from cerebral palsy, "the resident spaz, invisible as the sign that says NO RUNNING, the one no one pays attention to." Together, they form the most unlikely couple since Dharma and Greg. He's Brooks Brothers, she's Salvation Army. He's never even smoked a cigarette, she's got 20 different chemicals running through her veins. But when these two lonely teens meet one night at Ben's favorite hang, the Rialto (a classic film theatre that "smells like butter from the Paleozoic"), sparks fly. At least for Ben they do. Maybe it's because Colleen's the first girl to ever really notice him, to have the nerve to tease him about his disability instead of pretend it's not there. For once, Ben is actually more interested in his real life than a movie. Colleen takes him clubbing, lights his first joint, even challenges him to direct his own movie. But when Ben, in turn, dares her to stay straight, Colleen admits that, despite his devotion, she still needs the drugs to "smooth out the edges." Is Ben capable of convincing her otherwise? If not, how will he ever be cured of his Colleen addiction?

Author of the acclaimed Brimstone Journals, Ron Koertge's wry depiction of this car wreck of a relationship is sharply observed and wholly original. Teen readers will have a tough time turning the last page of this oddly endearing, screwball love story. (Ages 13 and older) --Jennifer Hubert

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:55 -0400)

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