The Big Crunch

by Pete Hautman

On This Page

Description

June is starting at her sixth school in four years when she meets Wes, who has just broken up with a girlfriend, and although they do not share an instant or intense connection, attraction turns to love and they wonder where it will lead.

Tags

Recommendations

Member Reviews

16 reviews
The Big Crunch is a sweet and entirely relatable story of teenage love. June and Wes don't expect to fall in love, let alone the forever-type while they're so young. With so many unknowns, true love seems doomed. But is it ever really doomed when it's for real (as we all want to believe as teenagers?).

The characters are neither exceptional nor social outcasts, which was a refreshing change from many other teen books. June is a plain-Jane; not ugly, not pretty. She's emotional and silly. She's an average girl, and while Wes is far more attractive, he's not without common flaws. He's not always a good friend and he doesn't think before he acts. He's OCD and can be overly sensitive.

Hautman is a master at realistic characterization. I loved show more June's voice— I saw myself in her, even the petty parts that I wish I didn't relate to. I experienced everything she did, from being aware that I'm picking a stupid fight with my boyfriend, to allowing my emotions to cloud my judgment, to obsessing over a relationship and not being able to let go, even when logic dictates that I should. Any teen who's ever been in love will see themselves in this story.

The cover is GORGEOUS. And although the cover reveals the direction of the story before you even start reading, it spoils nothing for the reader. The point of this love story isn't knowing how it ends; it's the journey of how they got there.

The Big Crunch is targeted at teen female readers, although I sincerely enjoyed it as an adult. The book is so relatable that it was almost cathartic for me. It was like reading my journals, but without the shame and embarrassment of seeing how dramatic my teenage years were. The Big Crunch is an amazing backlist book for Scholastic, and I'm sad that it has not done as well as similar books such as Eleanor & Park.

If you're looking for the perfect book for an on-the-mend heartbroken teen, or a teen reader who loves a light, yet page-turning modern love story, this is it.

4 Stars.
show less
When Wes saw June for the first time, he did not think too much about her. In fact she reminded him of a fish with “thick lips, a wide mouth, greenish-blue eyes that were a little too far apart” and he referred to her as “fish girl.” Wes had just broken up with Izzy, and June had just moved to Minnesota and was beginning her sixth school in four years. Neither was really looking for love but they eventually found each other and fell hard. Hautman tells their story in the third person alternating between June and Wes. June deals with her parents and their lame advice on all the moving they do with platitudes like “move on Junie, the past is the past” and There Is No Reverse Gear in Time Machine, a book her dad once read. They show more fail to see the toll all the moving is having on June, especially when she meets Wes and begins falling for him. As their relationship grows stronger June gets the awful news that they are moving again. Will June and Wes be able to keep their relationship going between Minnesota and Omaha, Nebraska? Do they want to keep it going? These questions and other issues of families and friends fill out the book with good character development and a quiet plot. Not your typical Hautman book which will probably appeal more to girls. show less
Not as entertaining as I expected judging by the inside flap, but still engaging. I do wonder whether today's teenagers find the characters easy to identify with, though: I don't think anyone I knew growing up was so completely muddled all the time as June and Wes. Not anyone functional, anyway....
Hautman, Pete. The Big Crunch. New York: Scholastic Press, 2011.

Characters: June; Wes; June’s parents; Wes’s parents; Paula (Wes’s sister); June’s and Wes’s classmates

Setting: Minneapolis, Minnesota; Omaha, Nebraska

Theme: teenage romance

Genre: young adult realistic fiction

Golden Quote: “’I think we were connected a long time ago,’ she said.
Wes thought back to the time they had met walking home. She was right; he had felt it even then. He said, ‘Do you think, like, years from now, it’ll still be there?’
‘The connection?’
‘The connection.’
June considered, and then said, ‘I don’t know.’ She really didn't.
‘Maybe it’s like a radio signal. As long as one of us is sending. We’re connected.’
What about show more when we’re asleep?’
“We connect through our dreams. Like we could be a thousand miles apart and I’d still know you were there.’
June felt her heart lurch, and for a moment she imagined it – a thousand miles between them. All too real.”

Summary: June is starting at her sixth school in four years when she meets Wes, who has just broken up with a girlfriend, and although they do not share an instant or intense connection, attraction turns to love and they wonder where it will lead.

Audience: grade level: 7 and up; age level: 13 and up

Curriculum ties: Not much to tie this story to any specific content area or curriculum other than leading to a discussions about personal relationships, however, it’s subject matter relates to young adults and should be viewed as a novel read primarily for leisure.

Awards: YALSA‘s best fiction for young adults; ALA’s best fiction for young adults, 2012; LA Times Young Adult Literature Award, 2012

Personal response: Perhaps one aspect of this love story that I found most appealing is how atypical it is a romance novel. Even June or Wes, the main characters enraptured in an unexpected personal relationship, are thrown off guard by their unrelenting passion for each other. There is no “Romeo and Juliet” love at first sight, but as the story develops, they both are so attracted to each other that it feels as if it is the continuing tale of Romeo and Juliet, sans the tragic ending. It is a realistic portrayal about how relationships are a journey into the unknown. I think that is what I liked most about it. It is not stereotypical or sugar coated. The ending is left very open because they know they are young and things may (or will) change between them, but until they reach that point, they are going to enjoy each other in the moment.

Hautman does a great job of describing the chemistry between June and Wes as well. As an adult reading about a young teenage relationship, it brought back a lot of memories about my past boyfriends and the teenage angst I once felt.
show less
Reviewed by LadyJay for TeensReadToo.com

The first time Wes saw June, fireworks definitely did not go off. He thought her greenish-blue eyes were set too far apart, and her hair looked as though she had stepped right out of the shower. June resembled a sea-creature, and not in a mermaid-like way.

He started calling her Aqua Girl, and eventually all Wes wanted was for June to be his.

Their affair is tumultuous, just like most teenagers in the throes of first love. Wes soon discovers that his relationship with June is exhausting, especially when it becomes long-distance. Is their Big Crunch a one-shot deal, or will it last?

Hautman uses the changing seasons to mark the progression of Wes and June's relationship. As the seasons change, their show more intensity and passion changes, as well. They learn about themselves through one another. They discover that there are limits to what they can do, both physically and emotionally.

I loved this book because the story was simple yet poignant. It wasn't flashy or filled with romantic dialogue; it was real. A boy and girl meet, fall in love, and try to make it work. Sometimes it lasts and sometimes it doesn't. Honestly, that really doesn't matter - it's about the story, and that's what makes this novel so wonderful.
show less
The jacket of this book describes it as “a love story for people not particularly biased towards romance.” The novel follows two teenagers — June, the daughter of a consultant who is always on the move, and has learned to keep herself disconnected in each new place; and Wes, a “semi-cool semi-geek” who lives in the little Minnesota town to which June’s family has recently relocated. On the first few days of school, June goes through the usual motions of trying to find a couple of decent girls and guys to hang out with, and meets Jerry, a nice guy who aspires to be class president and has already started campaigning for the election in the spring. Wes, recently broken up with his girlfriend of a year-and-a-half, spends his show more time hanging out with the guys and occasionally attempting to tidy his parents’ messy garage. June manages to worm her way into a friendship with three girls, while Wes is recruited by Jerry to be his campaign manager. Eventually June and Wes start talking since their walk home from school partially follows the same roads, and begin to build a friendship, which is only propelled into something more after Wes and Jerry have a fight at school.

The cover art is attractive, if a little misleading, since it is a four-panel of the seasons which looks very much like a graphic novel’s layout. Although the book is easy to read, I found myself feeling disconnected from the main characters. Wes seems a little flat and unengaged with the world around him, although his concern over his parents’ messy garage is one of his more endearing qualities. June is somewhat more dynamic, since much of the novel is slanted towards her perspective. As I neared the end of the book, I kept waiting for something to happen — some sort of clashing tension, dramatic incident — something! Instead, it closes on a quiet, reflective note, with a good dose of reality regarding young love.
show less
Wow--Wes and June have an honest, humorous, and realistic teenage romance. Pete Hautman writes such believable dialogue! I especially liked the parts where they talked about how having sex would change their relationship--I wonder how many teens stop to talk about this.

Members

Recently Added By

Published Reviews

ThingScore 100
This story takes place in a city named St. Paul in the state of Minnesota. It starts out in the season of fall with beautiful colored trees. Then it leads into the blistering winters of Minnesota and wonderful springs and hot summers.
The Big Crunch
added by 143sarah
The setting for this story takes place in a city named St. Paul in Minnesota.
The Big Crunch
added by 143sarah

Lists

Unshelved Book Clubs
579 works; 5 members

Author Information

Picture of author.
112+ Works 6,090 Members
Pete Hautman has written many novels for adults, including Doohickey, as well as the teen novels Hole in the Sky, Stone Cold, and Mr. Was, which was nominated for an Edgar Award by the Mystery Writers of America. He divides his time between the Twin Cities of Minnesota and the shores of Lake Pepin in southwestern Wisconsin

Awards and Honors

Classifications

Genres
Teen, Fiction and Literature, Young Adult
DDC/MDS
479LanguageLatin & Italic languagesOther Italic languages
LCC
PZ7 .H2887 .BLanguage and LiteratureFiction and juvenile belles lettresFiction and juvenile belles lettresJuvenile belles lettres
BISAC

Statistics

Members
205
Popularity
158,648
Reviews
15
Rating
½ (3.51)
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
4
ASINs
1