The Queen of Everything
by Deb Caletti
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Description
In the San Juan Islands in Washington State, high school junior Jordan MacKenzie learns about different kinds of love as her divorced father's troubling affair with a married woman ends in tragedy, and she tries to fit into her hippie mother's new family while halfheartedly dating the popular boy at school.Tags
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Member Reviews
It's about Jordan, an average teenager with divorced parents. She lives with her father, a predictable optometrist because her mother is too eccentric for her tastes. Her summer after her junior year was off to a normal start- a best friend, dumb job, and a new love interest- but then came Gayle D'Angelo. Gayle D'Angelo is her father's new girlfriend.....who happens to be married. But Jordan's father no longer listens to reason as he becomes more and more obsessed with Gayle. Jordan's normal summer ends up having an explosive ending.
I loved the writing. Seriously, it was great. Deb Caletti's writing is so detailed and intricate, she brings tiny details to mind that only contribute to overall story and character development.
The plot show more was slowish, but you know from page one that something horribly violent will happen. First off, because the narrator tell you, and also because its terribly hinted at and you would have to be stupid not to get it. Still, there was something tense about this book. While it wasn't thrilling, it was gripping. I think the best part of the book was easily the writing.
The main characters, especially Jordan, were well-drawn. It was like they were real people. The minor characters also had the same flair, but had less screen time. The thing about such interesting characters, is that you actually want to see them. But in the story, they just popped in and out, quick as a flash. Like Big Mama. I wanted to see more of her. And Jackson. I would have loved to see that budding romance.
Jordan was a real teenager. She wasn't some saint girl. She wasn't a rebel without a cause. She took notice of the world, and messed up a lot, and was likable. One of her mistakes was Kale. I hated Kale. He is the King of Douches. I wanted to crawl into the book and pop him one. I just didn't understand why Jordan still kept going out with him even though she clearly couldn't tolerate him. It just made me frustrated. I guess that makes the mark of a real character, though.
Overall, I really liked this book. Everytime I read a Deb Caletti book, they just keep getting better and better. show less
I loved the writing. Seriously, it was great. Deb Caletti's writing is so detailed and intricate, she brings tiny details to mind that only contribute to overall story and character development.
The plot show more was slowish, but you know from page one that something horribly violent will happen. First off, because the narrator tell you, and also because its terribly hinted at and you would have to be stupid not to get it. Still, there was something tense about this book. While it wasn't thrilling, it was gripping. I think the best part of the book was easily the writing.
The main characters, especially Jordan, were well-drawn. It was like they were real people. The minor characters also had the same flair, but had less screen time. The thing about such interesting characters, is that you actually want to see them. But in the story, they just popped in and out, quick as a flash. Like Big Mama. I wanted to see more of her. And Jackson. I would have loved to see that budding romance.
Jordan was a real teenager. She wasn't some saint girl. She wasn't a rebel without a cause. She took notice of the world, and messed up a lot, and was likable. One of her mistakes was Kale. I hated Kale. He is the King of Douches. I wanted to crawl into the book and pop him one. I just didn't understand why Jordan still kept going out with him even though she clearly couldn't tolerate him. It just made me frustrated. I guess that makes the mark of a real character, though.
Overall, I really liked this book. Everytime I read a Deb Caletti book, they just keep getting better and better. show less
This is a phenomenal story of how life happens. It is insightfully written and the characters are very real. Jordan is an intelligent and emotional teenager who is in advanced high school classes. She lives on Parrish Island and her parents have been separated since she was very little. Her mom is a hippy soul who transformed their old house into a bed and breakfast inn. She has a baby boy Max with a husband ten years her junior who is a sculpture artist. Because living with her mom becomes too chaotic and overcrowded for Jordan, she moves to dad’s place. Dad was just a regular guy who loved the history of renaissance art and worked as an optometrist. Jordan always thought that she is more like her father. Her grandparents often came show more over on weekends to enjoy dinner and the evening together. Everything was normal until Jordan met Mrs. D’Angelo at her part time job, the “True You Health” Centre. She remarked on Mrs. D’Angelo’s strong presence and femininity, the same characteristics which tempt Jordan’s father and steal him into a whirlwind romance. Seeing her father totally changed through a relationship with someone who is married, Jordan tries to warn him, sensing that something bad is going to happen. While she tries her best with family matters, Jordan has typical teenage troubles; having her first sexual experience with the wrong boyfriend and falling for her best girlfriend’s brother who happens to always be at the right place at the right time to help her out.
This is definitely my favorite book so far. show less
This is definitely my favorite book so far. show less
To be perfectly honest, I remember picking this book up from the YA section at the library, and even opening its pages to read it, but I cannot recall how it goes. I know I liked it, but I cannot decide if it was so insignificant that it didn't leave an impression on my brain or if I just read so many books in middle school that it's impossible to remember them all. Probably the latter, but it still makes me wonder...
I really liked the other Deb Caletti book that I read - Honey, Baby, Sweetheart and I was excited about reading this book. Unfortunately, it mostly fell flat to me. I had put it on hold because of the subject matter - a girl whose father kills his girlfriend's husband. It sounded sensational. But really this book is full of too many things and too many people, and all of the characters fall a little flat and are mostly unknowable. Even Jordan, the girl in the book, does a lot of things that don't make sense, knowing the little you do about her. She has sex with a guy she really does not like, because she wants to not think about her father. The best thing about the book is the island they live on - Parrish Island, which is fictional, show more but sounds a lot like a smaller Nantucket. Everything else is too disjointed. show less
17 year old Jordan, the only child of divorced parents, watches her father descend into an obsessive affair with a married woman which ends tragically. She finds herself somewhat obsessed as well with an unpredictable, malfesant, school mate. This unhappy teen novel reflects real life humaness and weaknesses of young adult and adult relationships.
This story was very interesting, although not extremely believable. I thought it was well written and a good read.
this book i found to be a little boring at times but the story itself was very real.
Members
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Published Reviews
"The voice of Jordan is clear, strong, and often funny. Caletti's phrasing is wonderful...This book is filled with vivid descriptions along with sharp dialogue . Caletti's first teen novel is sure to be embraced by anyone who enjoys excellent, insightful writing."
added by Awesomeness1
"...absorbing..."
added by Awesomeness1
"Jordan's authentic teenage voice...will hold readers..."
added by Awesomeness1
Author Information
Awards and Honors
Awards
Notable Lists
Work Relationships
Common Knowledge
- Original publication date
- 2002
- People/Characters
- Jordan; Gayle D'Angelo; Kale Kramer
- Important places
- Washington, USA
- Dedication
- For my roots and branches- Mom, Dad, Sue, Warren, Sam, and Nick. With Love
- First words
- People ask me all the time what having Vince MacKenzie for a father was like.
- Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)Always, the music sounds like a welcome.
Classifications
Statistics
- Members
- 362
- Popularity
- 86,894
- Reviews
- 8
- Rating
- (3.47)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 17
- ASINs
- 3




























































