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3.0 

Shy

By Max Porter
Shy by Max Porter digital book - Fable

Publisher Description

A novel about guilt, rage, imagination, and boyhood, about being lost in the dark and learning you’re not alone, soon to be adapted as the major motion picture STEVE, starring Cillian Murphy


This is the story of a few strange hours in the life of a troubled teenage boy.

You mustn’t do that to yourself Shy. You mustn’t hurt yourself like that.

He is wandering into the night listening to the voices in his head: his teachers, his parents, the people he has hurt and the people who are trying to love him.

Got your special meds, nutcase?

He is escaping Last Chance, a home for “very disturbed young men,” and walking into the haunted space between his night terrors, his past, and the heavy question of his future.

The night is huge and it hurts.

In Shy, Max Porter extends the excavation of boyhood that began with Grief Is the Thing with Feathers and continued with Lanny. But here he asks: How does mischievous wonder and anarchic energy curdle into something more disturbing and violent? Shy is a bravura, lyric, music-besotted performance by one of the great writers of his generation.

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Shy Reviews

3.0
“Interesting read with a different style of POV. One POV but with a combination of memories, inner dialogue, dialoguea with others. Kind of reminded me of House of Leaves. Not sure how I felt about Shy. He's self destructive, doesn't take responsibility for his actions but I also feel bad for him because he suffers from either bi-polar or schizophrenia. I would recommend this short book because it's just interesting and I definitely want to read more from Max Porter”
“Genuinely felt like I was hallucinating while reading this, which I assume was the point. The writing is veryyyy experimental - multiple fonts, barely any punctuation and a nonstop stream of consciousness. There’s no plot, and while I get the general idea, I doubt I’ll remember much of it by tonight. I did add an extra half star after reading more about the author and how it was written at 170 bpm. I respect the concept, even if it wasn’t for me.”
“Growing up is such a violent thing. For some is more than others, but it's never an easy process, not really. And Shy shows us how dificult that process can be for some people. Honestly, I related to the main character, Shy, quite a bit. Not because I was ever violent or had any kind of "atitude problem" while I was a teenager. But because, like him, I also struggled a lot with my mental health during my adolescence (and first years of young adulthood, let's be real). In Shy I saw bits of myself, not in the violence, but in the doubt; in the mood swings; in the use of music as form of escapism; in the sleep terrors; in the way he processed the world around him; in the frustration of having so many feelings but not understanding them; etc. Teenage boys, as a whole, don't have the best reputation. But they are still children, they are still learning, they are dealing with so many things and thoughts and feelings. This book really made me have a new understanding about boyhood that I didn't have. Not only boyhood on general, but also more especifically on the teens that we call "dificult". This is an amazing read. I trully recommend, especially for those who interact with teenagers daily. PS: the movie Steve, based on a secondary character in this book, is also really good.”

About Max Porter

Max Porter is the author of Lanny, which was longlisted for the Booker Prize, Grief Is the Thing with Feathers, winner of the International Dylan Thomas Prize, and The Death of Francis Bacon. He lives in Bath with his family.

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