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Searching... Oakdale Library | TEEN 305.2352 KAR | Searching... Unknown |
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Summary
Summary
"This book is filled with juicy young person wisdom." --Amy Poehler
The definitive guide to being a teen in the modern age, with sage advice from a modern teenager and appealing to fans of Rookie.
Earth Hates Me presents a look inside the mind of the modern teenager--from a modern teenager's perspective. Sixteen-year-old Ruby Karp addresses the issues facing every highschooler, from grades to peer pressure to Snapchat stories, and unpacks their complicated effects on the teen psyche.
Ruby advises her peers on the importance of feminism ("not just the Spice Girls version"), how to deal with jealousy and friend break-ups, family life, and much more. The book takes an in-depth look at the effect of social media on modern teens and the growing pressures of choosing the right college and career. Amy Poehler says, "This book is filled with juicy young person wisdom."
With Ruby's powerful underlying message "we are more than just a bunch of dumb teenagers obsessed with our phones," Earth Hates Me is the definitive guide to being a teen in the modern age.
Author Notes
Ruby Karp, a sixteen-year-old feminist, comedian, and journalist, has spoken about feminism on Amy Poehler's Smart Girls at the Party and at TEDx. She hosts a monthly stand-up show at the Upright Citizen's Brigade Theatre sand has written for Hello Giggles , Mashable , and other publications. Currently, she's trying to make sense of Calculus at Laguardia High School in NYC..
Reviews (4)
School Library Journal Review
Gr 9 Up-For 16-year-old Karp, life consisted of going to school, practicing for the ACT, performing improv comedy, and writing this book for her peers to help them navigate high school. Karp uses her story as a template for those who want to make it out of their teens with their dignity and self-esteem intact. Raised by a single mom, Karp is Jewish, lives in Manhattan on the upper west side, and attends a huge public arts school in the city. She states quite frankly that she can only speak to what she knows and what she has experienced, but she provides advice on many subjects including: social media and bullying; love and unrequited love; pressure from family, school, and peers; feminism; friendships; and family life. She encourages readers to find their own voice and use it to be a changemaker; she has strong opinions and does not fear expressing them. The writing is clear and straightforward with a voice that will appeal to young people. There are many current pop culture references as well as mentions of older TV shows and movies that Karp loves. VERDICT Teen readers seeking an irreverent memoir/self-help book written from the perspective of a fellow high schooler will find this work captivating.-Elizabeth Kahn, Patrick F. Taylor Science & Technology Academy, Avondale, LA © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Horn Book Review
Sixteen-year-old comedian Ruby Karp pulls no punches with her unaffected discussions of issues relevant to teen girls today: feminism, social media, family life, and more. For example, she discusses FOMO, the "fear of missing out," and how it is linked to social media. This book is a valuable resource for teen girls and the adults in their lives to explore together. (c) Copyright 2018. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Kirkus Review
Advice for teens is gleaned from the life of 16-year-old UCB Comedy performer Karp in this memoir. Beginning with a Q-and-A session between Karp and Broad City actress Ilana Glazer, this offering goes on to discuss everything from white, Jewish Karp's embrace of humor and feminism to her explanation of FOMO, or "fear of missing out," which she feels is experienced by young people in regard to their use of social media and the difficulty many have in disconnecting themselves from it. She also parses bullying, pointing out that it's rarely as clear-cut as is portrayed in popular culture, and frankly discusses sex education, advocating for the inclusion of much more instruction around rape. She displays a self-aware understanding both that some of her worries are problems of privilege but also that they are unfairly dismissed by some adults as teen angst. Teens will appreciate and easily identify with this multilayered experience of cultural power even if at times the writing feels a bit clichd, as when she exhorts her readers to "Live your life the way you want to be living it" or to "Be the change." Yet overwhelmingly, Karp's conversational narrative is positive, direct, and embedded with a confidence that will appeal to like-minded youth. A thoughtful blend of encouragement and entertaining personal stories. (Memoir. 12-18) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Review
*Starred Review* Sixteen-year-old Karp has already earned her cred as an author and stand-up comedian, two skills that come together beautifully in this compassionate self-help book. She has a lot to say to fellow teens about the pressures of growing up in the twenty-first century. Consider, for example, those awkward middle-school years preserved forever in tweets and Instagram posts. What adult can understand that? Then there is the competition for acceptance into a good middle school that morphs into competition for acceptance into a good high school, all leading up to the big test of college acceptance. Karp understands this all too well. And she's not going for platitudes such as, It all gets better, because teens need help in the here and now. Adopting a self-deprecating humor that is the trademark of stand-up comedy, Karp uses her own experiences to illustrate the suffocating stress caused by various pressures. If every reader can't relate to the intensity of Karp's high-profile performing arts high school, they can certainly get Ruby's Five Step Plan for Getting Over Someone (Who Doesn't Deserve Your Excellence). Generous, insightful, and funny, Karp is an excellent life coach for contemporary high-school students.--Colson, Diane Copyright 2017 Booklist