Hail Caesar

by Thu Huong Ha

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Everyone wants to be Caesar's friend and he doesn't care about anybody, until a new girl comes to town and turns his life upside down.

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4 reviews
The main character is - and is intended to be - a thoroughly unpleasant person, who uses girls as disposable sex dispensers in order to keep distracting himself from the fact that he doesn't have a clue who he is outside of sex. By the end of the novel he's just on the verge of realising this and maybe resolving to do something about it. I do like that The Girl ends up pointing out that no it's not actually her job to be his therapist. Technically it's not his younger sister's job either but she's family and he'd probably do the same for her if he had the emotional intelligence of a potato....
Reviewed by Long Nguyen for TeensReadToo.com

HAIL CAESAR is the story of the big-shot. That one guy everyone knows or knows of and can't help respecting, loving, wanting to be or to be with. PUSH Writing Intern alumna Thu-Huong Ha began writing HAIL CAESAR when she was fifteen years old, winning her internship and finishing her book at seventeen. She is part of a new generation of young writers whose talent exceeds their age by years and years and showcases writing ability and wisdom seldom common in contemporary teenage voices today.

John, known to everyone else as Caesar, is the most popular guy around. He can't be touched, he gets what he wants and does what he wants. Life is good for him. He has nothing to worry about. Caesar believes show more he has everything but realizes everything in his eyes doesn't mean what it once used to. Not since Eva appeared, at least.

Eva, the new student who doesn't see Caesar as social royalty. No, to her he's just a normal everyday asshole. Eva is witty, spontaneous, immovable, and outright antagonistic. Through experiences with Eva, Caesar learns to ask himself questions and be more open with himself about his own feelings, leaving one to believe: does Caesar really have feelings after all? Eva changes Caesar. She changes everything. But the question she has him asking himself is: is all of this change really beneficial, or just a detriment in the end?

Thu-Huong Ha models a narrative of a guy who is on top of world but doesn't feel it anymore. The voice she creates is sunny, methodical, deep, and classically misunderstood. With her debut novel, HAIL CAESAR, Thu-Huong Ha enters the world of a young-adult audience with explosions and purpose and great effect.
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John “Caesar” Miller knows he’s the coolest guys around. Guys want to be him. Girls want to be with him—and by that he means they want to have sex with him. Caesar believes that he deserves everything and everyone he gets, and that he doesn’t have to care for them in return.

Until he meets the new girl, Eva. From the start he knows there’s something different about her. It’s not just that she’s smart AND beautiful AND doesn’t immediately fall for him; he’s also able to talk to her in a way he’s never been able to talk before. Caesar can’t decide what to do. Should he continue on with his old but easy lifestyle of hooking up with dozens of girls? Or should he actually, finally grow a heart and learn to love a show more little?

Written by a 17-year-old girl, HAIL CAESAR is a realistic portrayal of the mind of a kind of person whose mind usually isn’t penetrable. Some might be disappointed with the non-ending but I think that it is just like real life. This is a good book to read if you’re in between some more heavy reading.
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This is a classic story of a young man who thinks he has it all which includes his good looks, talents, and charm. He has the mentality of a player who thinks he could get any girl until he meets a young girl who turns the tables around as she sees passed his game.

It's a great story for all teens and some may learn that you can't have everything.
½

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Canonical title
Hail Caesar

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Teen, Young Adult
DDC/MDS
813.6Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English2000-
LCC
PZ7 .H1105Language and LiteratureFiction and juvenile belles lettresFiction and juvenile belles lettresJuvenile belles lettres
BISAC

Statistics

Members
73
Popularity
431,425
Reviews
4
Rating
½ (3.29)
Languages
English
Media
Paper
ISBNs
3