Good Fiction for Teens and Grown-ups Funny fiction for teens and grown-ups by Jonathan Pearce Honesty Cover funny teen and grown-up fiction by Jonathan Pearce. No teen sex to speak of

Balona Youth Searches
for Ways to De-fuse
a Fellow-Student's Bombplot
and Meet the Girl of His Dreams
and
Get a New Harley

To Order funny teen fiction without much teen sex

2d Edition, revised (2004)
ISBN 1-5941-1102-2
5.5x8.5 in., 200pp.
Perfectbound; $15.95
Flesch Reading Ease: 79.2
Flesch-Kincaid Level: 5.2
Distributor: Midpoint Trade Books

Zachary Taylor Burnross is 16 and trapped in Balona High School summer school. Some would say Zack acts more like a spoiled, flakey seventh-grader than a soon-to-be senior, but Agusta "Gussi" Rieper (who seems to be formulating plans to blow up the school) thinks that Zack has definite possibilities for marriage, and Patella (an Older Woman) sometimes mentions sex. Zack is already under a strain because of his young mother's possible adultery, his elderly father's probable loss of mind, and Zack's own passionate desire for a motorcycle and a date with a glamorous young TV star.

Teachers, Librarians, Parents, Grandparents, General Readers:Why Honesty? shim
The score on our SMUTSCALE INDEX [0--10] screamers
for A Little Honesty is a pallid "1" (for Patella Sackworth's suggesting.)

notes <=CLICK at your pleasure!

Here's a sample: Zack's passionate desire for the new red Harley on display in the motorcycle dealer's front window has caused Zack to make an on-the-top-of-the head purchase. Zack's mother is horrified.

  A couple months ago I dipped into my window-washing and lawn-raking college fund to buy me a motorcycle helmet in anticipation of the moving acquisition. Mummy spilled a pot to the kitchen floor when she saw me wearing it in the house that first time. It's kind of large.
  "You take that thing right back over there and get your money back!"
  "It was on sale and they won't take it back." I didn't lie at all about that, since the helmet was a close-out item at Runcibles in the Delta City Mall where I went with Joe for him to look for some computer thingy. And they told me I couldn't bring it back, no matter what, once you got your hair-smell into it.
  "It looks like a giant red melon on top of your neck." Mummy squinted at me and frowned, exaggerating again. "It looks like a huge red billiard ball."
  She exaggerated again, simply because the helmet is actually a demo, which is what you put on a slightly larger-than-life dummy, so guys can see it easily from out in the street. So it is actually a little big. But even if it weren't a little large it would upset Mummy to see me wear it, so I wear it inside only at meals and in my room and outside after school and weekends where I can imagine myself straddling a great red hog around the neighborhood while I'm washing windows or mowing lawns.

CRITICS SAY

READY IN DECEMBER

CATALOG AUTHOR LINKS FREE! MASTER TRI NEWEST!


Author's E-Mail