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Formats
Paperback Details
  • 08/2013
  • 9781482358247
  • 169 pages
  • $11.50
Ebook Details
  • 05/2013
  • B00CRHNQT6
  • 169 pages
  • $2.39
Day's Lee
Author
Guitar Hero
Day's Lee, author

Children/Young Adult; General Fiction (including literary and historical); (Market)

Sometimes you have to lose it all to discover what you really have. Life can’t get any worse for sixteen-year-old David Chang. He lost his job, is on the verge of being kicked out of his best friend’s band, and Christine thinks he lied to avoid going to the prom with her. How can one little mistake totally ruin a guy’s life? One is all it takes to make David face the music and learn what it really means to be a Guitar Hero. 

Reviews
Amy’s Marathon of Books

“Guitar Hero is a great first novel for Lee, and I look forward to reading what she creates in the future.” 

CM Magazine

"Guitar Hero, the latest book by Day's Lee, is a welcome addition to Canadian young adult fiction and, more broadly, the expanding body of Chinese Canadian literature that focuses on Chinese immigrants and their Canadian-born descendants."

Kirkus Review

In this coming-of-age story, 16-year-old David Chang finds that striking a balance between his dreams and his heritage is harder than striking the right chord on a guitar.

Lee (The Fragrant Garden, 2005) writes her first teen novel from the perspective of a Montreal boy who wants nothing more than to become a rock ’n’ roll legend like John Lennon or Carlos Santana. He imagines them cheering on his guitar practices from their posters on his bedroom wall. But his real-life circumstances aren’t so encouraging. His dad, a second-generation Chinese immigrant who now works at a grocery store after losing a high-paying job, has plunged the family into debt by gambling. David’s relationship with his band, Pumping Iron, is strained after he makes a mistake that takes them out of a major competition. To make matters worse, his parents don’t want him to be a musician; expecting him to become a “professional”—i.e., a lawyer or doctor—they stop paying for his guitar lessons to save money. David resents his dad for losing the family’s money and for getting in the way of his dream. But as he struggles to keep playing in spite of all the obstacles, he finds that he and his father have more in common than he thought. Throughout the story, a lively narration brings Montreal and its Chinese subculture to life through the young protagonist’s eyes. The Chang family is made up of well-rounded, believable characters who really love each other but often let mistakes and lack of communication disrupt their relationships. David’s problems with friends, girls, and his parents’ expectations will also ring true for many teen readers. There are a few times when the story does stretch the bounds of belief: David’s grandmother, for example, always speaks Chinese, so Lee’s decision to translate her dialogue into broken English makes little sense, and some of the secrets the characters keep from each other seem to exist only to create conflict. Yet the book’s main themes of family and love drown out all the off notes.

A joyful teen drama told with soul and style.

News
05/01/2014
Best Book for Kids and Teens

Guitar Hero is named 2014 Best Book for Kids and Teens by the Canadian Children's Book Centre in the category of Junior and Intermediate Fiction.

Formats
Paperback Details
  • 08/2013
  • 9781482358247
  • 169 pages
  • $11.50
Ebook Details
  • 05/2013
  • B00CRHNQT6
  • 169 pages
  • $2.39
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