100 Sideways Miles

by Andrew Smith

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Finn Easton, sixteen and epileptic, struggles to feel like more than just a character in his father's cult-classic novels with the help of his best friend, Cade Hernandez, and first love, Julia, until Julia moves away.

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20 reviews
So there's a genre of book about a child protagonist who has one (or many) precocious quirks. And it sounds like it would be too twee to be acceptable, but somehow I'm addicted. And in the same vein as The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time and The Selected Works of T.S. Spivet we have 100 Sideways Miles. Finn Easton measures time in the distance the Earth has traveled in its orbit (20 miles/second), makes frequent references to the Knackery, and refers to his seizures as "blanking out." And he is so real and so endearing that it never feels twee.

The central premise of the book is one giant metaphor for coming of age: Finn's father, the famous writer Michael Easton, wrote a book about aliens that come to Earth through Lazarus show more Doors and used Finn's name for the protagonist, as well as several of his physical characteristics (his :|: scar from when a horse landed on him, his heterochromia) and personality quirks. Only these aliens are Not Human. Finn is not sure whether he is a real person or just an alien from his father's book -- and on a greater level is trying to figure out whether he's normal and how he fits into the world. I'm a sucker for a coming of age story, and this one is done well. (For no good reason, a huge network in my hippocampus is dedicated to recognizing Night Journey stories -- a coming of age genre made up by my high school English class that doesn't exist in the real world.)

Finally, it's worth noting that there are few books that allow characters of color to have a narrative of their own that doesn't revolve around their ethnicity. Julia Bishop is a refreshing counterpoint as a character of color, who's allowed to develop her own personality and her own story.
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I love the irreverent and earnest voice of this narrator Finn, a high school junior whose father has written an extremely popular science fiction novel with a main character named Finn. Along with his best friend, a wild and crazy guy who doesn't hesitate to get into trouble, Finn seems completely believable in spite of the unusual accident of a horse landing on him and his mom when he was 7 and killing his mother. The epilepsy caused by that accident partly defines Finn, as does his wish to always be "fine" and normal, but when Julia moves nearby new possibilities come into play.
Desde que salió, este libro estaba en mi lista de prioridades, pero siempre surgía algún otro más "importante". No fue sino hasta hace dos días que me encontré con está imagen —que es la imagen del guardapolvo de la edición tapa dura— y es tan a la Pushing Daisies, que no pude resistirme más.



Me alegra haberme dejado seducir por esa belleza de imagen, porque este libro ME ENCANTÓ, así, en mayúsculas. Así que: puntos para mi superficialidad; esta vez lo hiciste bien, pequeña.

La historia es perfectamente extraña y encantadora, con un toque de aventura, un toque de romance y un montón de lo que significa crecer y aprender a ser uno mismo. Los personajes son inolvidables. Claro que tiene algunos defectos: la escritura, show more aunque única, llega a ser un poco repetitiva por partes; y la forma en que actúa Finn luego de sus ataques epilépticos me hacía querer golpearlo, pero en general lo disfrute muchísimo y son más los pros que los contras.

Andrew Smith, acabas de consolidarte como mi autor de YA contemporáneo favorito.
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A classic coming-of-age tale of aliens, boners and pizza. It's mire than slightly weird and a little bit wound too tightly around itself, but any minor flaws are more than made up for with the most entertaining sidekick this side of a Marvel comic.

You'll get some of the standard stuff (love, relationships, teenagers being unreasonably angry) along with a heaping helping of Weird (time measured in distance the Earth has travelled in the universe, a horse falling off a bridge, etc.). Recommended for anyone who's not offended by swearing and has a sneaking suspicion they live inside a book.
A classic coming-of-age tale of aliens, boners and pizza. It's mire than slightly weird and a little bit wound too tightly around itself, but any minor flaws are more than made up for with the most entertaining sidekick this side of a Marvel comic.

You'll get some of the standard stuff (love, relationships, teenagers being unreasonably angry) along with a heaping helping of Weird (time measured in distance the Earth has travelled in the universe, a horse falling off a bridge, etc.). Recommended for anyone who's not offended by swearing and has a sneaking suspicion they live inside a book.
I want to give this book a 3.5. It was a good book that deserves better than a 3, but also I don’t think it wowed me enough to get a 4. It was a fun story with memorable characters (especially Cade, that boy was a trip and I love him). I’m a huge sucker for great literary friendships and I really did adore the one between Finn and Cade. They were obviously close and cared about each other and really we just need more friendships between male characters. It was surprisingly funny at times and more thought provoking than I expected. I can’t remember the last time I dwelled so much about our place in the universe and the atoms that make us us.
The pacing of the book was decent though it did feel like the author repeated some of the show more same ideas a bit too often and seemed to paraphrase what he’d said previously. Story wise it did seem a little meandering at times, but really isn’t that how life is? Just events and pieces leading to an end? And this is a story about a boy realizing that he actually isn’t just a character from his father’s book so it fits. show less
Finn doesn't remember much of his early childhood. His mom was killed and his back was broken when they were hit by a falling horse. I know it sounds weird, but Finn explains it rather well. He looks at the world through miles rather than minutes and this colors this whole story. I enjoyed it and had some laugh out loud moments, but there were also times when I got bogged down by Finn's need to fill us in with what seem like extraneous history lessons, or excessive trivia. These inserts fit in well with the story and others may like them better than I did. It's a good book in a sea of dystopians right now. I'd give it 3.5 stars actually.

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Author Information

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17+ Works 3,944 Members
Andrew Smith is Professor of English Studies at the University of Glamorgan His publications include Gothic Literature (2007), Victorian demons (2004) and Gothic Radicalism (2000)

Some Editions

Heyborne, Kirby (Narrator)

Awards and Honors

Common Knowledge

Canonical title*
Auf Umwegen
Original title
100 sideways miles
Original publication date
2014
People/Characters
Finn Easton; Cade Hernandez; Julia Bishop
Important places
San Francisquito Canyon, Los Angeles county, California
Dedication*
Für Mutter und Vater, deren Atome sich in alle Winde zerstreuen
First words*
Fakt ist: Ich weiss nicht, wo ich eigentlich her bin.
Last words*
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)Er gab Gas, und wir bretterten an der Erscheinung vorbei in die Nacht.
Original language*
Amerikanisch
*Some information comes from Common Knowledge in other languages. Click "Edit" for more information.

Classifications

Genres
Teen, Fiction and Literature, Young Adult
DDC/MDS
813.6Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English2000-
LCC
PZ7 .S64257 .ALanguage and LiteratureFiction and juvenile belles lettresFiction and juvenile belles lettresJuvenile belles lettres
BISAC

Statistics

Members
392
Popularity
79,157
Reviews
19
Rating
½ (3.56)
Languages
English, German
Media
Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
ISBNs
11
ASINs
4