Free Download We Are the Ants, by Shaun David Hutchinson

Free Download We Are the Ants, by Shaun David Hutchinson

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We Are the Ants, by Shaun David Hutchinson

We Are the Ants, by Shaun David Hutchinson


We Are the Ants, by Shaun David Hutchinson


Free Download We Are the Ants, by Shaun David Hutchinson

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We Are the Ants, by Shaun David Hutchinson

Review

A 2016 Shelf Awareness Best Book of the Year A 2017 ALA Top Ten Rainbow List Title “A beautiful, masterfully told story by someone who is at the top of his craft.” –Lambda Literary “Unfailingly dramatic and crackling with characters who become real upon the page.” –Booklist, starred review “Bitterly funny, with a ray of hope amid bleakness.” –Kirkus Reviews, starred review “Hints of Kurt Vonnegut’s Slaughterhouse Five… Highly recommended.” –School Library Journal, starred review “Hutchinson has crafted an unflinching portrait of the pain and confusion of young love and loss.” –Publishers Weekly, starred review “Wonderfully written… bracingly smart and unusual.” –Shelf Awareness, starred review

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About the Author

Shaun David Hutchinson is the author of numerous books for young adults, including The Past and Other Things That Should Stay Buried, The Apocalypse of Elena Mendoza, At the Edge of the Universe, and We Are the Ants. He also edited the anthologies Violent Ends and Feral Youth and wrote the memoir Brave Face, which chronicles his struggles with depression and coming out during his teenage years. He lives in Seattle, where he enjoys drinking coffee, yelling at the TV, and eating cake. Visit him at ShaunDavidHutchinson.com or on Twitter @ShaunieDarko.

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Product details

Hardcover: 464 pages

Publisher: Simon Pulse; First edition. edition (January 19, 2016)

Language: English

ISBN-10: 148144963X

ISBN-13: 978-1481449632

Product Dimensions:

5.5 x 1.4 x 8.2 inches

Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)

Average Customer Review:

4.5 out of 5 stars

157 customer reviews

Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

#103,369 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

We Are the Ants by Shaun David Hutchinson is a remarkable account about the coming of age of Henry Jerome Denton from his perspective as a much-persecuted 13-year-old. The reader will have to read most of the novel before discovering the complete name of this protagonist. Through most of the novel, he will be identified with the name “Space Boy,” a title he despises. This is not a whining, complaining account; it is delivered more from a position of resignation, hints of despair, and an acceptance of the inevitability that the world will end on 29 January 2016. Since that is a given, absolutely nothing that happens prior to that point has any meaning. The only possible alternative will occur if the aliens convince Space Boy to hit the Big Red Button. Without Henry's agreement to do this, planet Earth will cease to exist.Published in January 2016, this 465-page novel has two central anchoring ideas. The entire novel is an account of Henry's life for one year prior to 29 January 2016. The daily events happening to and around him will influence his decision to push the Big Red Button. If he pushes it, planet Earth continues; if Henry's despair is so great and he does nothing, the Earth ceases to exist. Only Henry knows this. It is not that it is a secret, he has tried to tell others about his frequent abductions by the aliens as they continue to check with Henry and emphasize that the decision is completely Henry's to make. Henry's attempts at telling others has earned him the name “Space Boy.”With such a serious decision to make, readers might think it would be a good idea to keep Henry happy. That brings us to the second anchoring point that appears throughout the novel, the suicide of Jesse. Henry loved his boyfriend and believes that he, Henry, was responsible for his boyfriend's death. Henry is bullied in school both for his belief in aliens (Space Boy) and for his openly homosexual relationship that he had enjoyed with Jesse. One of the biggest bullies is a very rich high school athlete, Marcus. This appears quite strange because Marcus and Space Boy are in a covert homosexual relationship that developed as Henry tried to find a substitute friend to fill the void resulting from Jesse's suicide. The many, many incidents of school bullying center more on the alien factor than the homosexual one.This novel explores the issue of homosexual relationships in a way that is the best I have ever read by not exploring it. Throughout the novel, there is simply an acceptance of Henry's lifestyle choice. His mother accepts it and even wants to have a safe-sex talk with him. Audrey, the closest person to Henry that might be called a girlfriend, accepts Henry's choice. That is probably because she was a best friend to Henry and Jesse before the suicide and she was aware of the boys' relationship. Because Henry blames himself for Jesse's suicide, he has withdrawn from even the platonic relationship he had with Audrey. Audrey is sad about this and tries throughout the story to rekindle their earlier relationship. The reader will learn (not a spoiler) that Audrey also feels guilty because she believes she was the reason for the suicide. Even Henry's grandmother, Nana, accepts Henry's choice when she can remember to think about it. She is suffering from Alzheimer disease; her struggle is an important story-within-a-story and contributes wonderful insights on the progression of life.Marcus as the choice to fill the void of the dead Jesse could not continue as a relationship with Henry. One-half of the time spent in satisfactory sex contrasted with the second-half of the relationship spent in administering punishing physical violence to Henry was a bomb waiting to go off. Luckily for Henry, the arrival at school of a new guy, Diego Vega, provided an alternative. Starting out on a very platonic and intellectual relationship, there were signs that a sexual component would evolve. The conflict here was that Diego (also called Valentin) had a deep, dark secret that he refused to reveal to Henry. All Henry's attempts to question Diego were rebuffed. Google searches about his life before Henry returned no results. Honesty and openness were important to Henry; nothing could proceed without a transparent base of honesty and full disclosure.The character interactions in the book are brilliant as they engage in dialogues defining their relationships. Henry mentions that he loves his brother, Charlie, because he has to but as far as daily life, Henry despises his brother. As the novel progresses, Henry finds that he didn't really know much about Charlie. Henry engages in dialogues with Nana despite her frequent mental absences when she is not sure who he is. Henry's advice to his mother on life choices is ironic and is the one point where I had to almost suspend belief. How can a person this young make such great, deeply philosophical observations? I found myself using a highlighter frequently as Henry made observations that were stunning philosophically stated with such simplicity.There are some really great “outtakes.” These are chapters depicting how Planet Earth might disappear for reasons other than Henry failing to hit the Big Red Button.This is one of the books I recommend highly for all ages (mostly 12 and up). Young people will empathize with the depictions of classroom life. The sexual angle is done with no sleaze and no unnecessary referencing. The importance of strong family relationships is emphasized even though Henry's family appears to be the definition of dysfunctional.And then there is THE QUESTION. Did Henry push the Big Red Button?

What do you do? What DOES a young gay teen boy do when he has the weight - and possibly even the fate - of the world upon his shoulders?WE ARE THE ANTS is a very intriguing tale - part fantasy, part speculative fiction, part M4M romance - and I thoroughly enjoyed reading it.It was a tad reminiscent of - but definitely NOT derivative from - Scott Heim's amazing novel of 10 or so years ago, MYSTERIOUS SKIN.That being said, I still was not totally convinced that Henry was being regularly abducted by aliens - and actually I don't think we're meant to be TOTALLY convinced of that since the imaginative author does drop a couple of hints about sleep-walking and blackouts. I'm not a scientist but I occasionally read books about science and I tend to believe that biology and physics are pretty much the same throughout the entire universe. I do believe that there IS alien life out there somewhere - billions and billions of planets to be considered - but I tend to think their inhabitants will be pretty much like us. The aliens here just seemed like they were special effects from a low budget SF movie. But, don't get me wrong, Henry believed they were real and I decided to be an engaged reader and grant the author - a great story teller - "suspension of disbelief."MC Henry has had a very difficult time in his life and the empathetic reader cannot help but love him.One facet of the story that interested me a lot were Henry's many speculations on how the world might end - since the decision was SEEMINGLY up to him - some with an apoplectic whimper, some with an apoplectic bang.Henry's grief with regard to his first boyfriend's suicide is a very deep and thought-provoking part of the novel and has a great deal to do with what is going on in Henry's mind. And yet, with his slowly developing friendship and then probable romantic interest in Diego, we can also see that it may very well be possible for Henry to move on. One hopes so.POSSIBLE SPOILER:The ending is very "up in the air" - and rightly so. I think readers will need to decide that for themselves. But, it IS a year later now and we're all still here.I rate it 4 1/2 stars but I rounded down because the characterization of the aliens just didn't totally convince me they were real. Still, this was a great book. And I will read it again because I'm sure I missed some wonderful things along the way.

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