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l8r, g8r is the third novel in a young adult series by Lauren Myracle written entirely as instant messages; the first two are ttyl and ttfn. l8r, g8r is a coming of age novel published on March 1, 2007 by Harry N. Abrams.

l8r g8r was the No. 1 banned book in 2009 (it later became No. 9 in 2010) due to the prevalent sexual content, use of profanity and the use of shorthand language. The fact that the book depicts sexual content among adults also contributed to its banning. Despite the notoriety, it is widely popular among children, particularly young women who feel that they can relate to the characters.

Plot summary

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Angela is excited just to be reunited with her friends for their final year of high school. Zoe is estatic about seeing her boyfriend Doug after he has traveled the world. Zoe later has an encounter with from a girl in her class where she shared an embarrassing secret about Jana, a viciously mean but popular school girl and an enemy of Maddie, Zoe and Angela. She find outs that Jana has teddy bear name "Boo Boo bear" which is so very dear. Moments later Jana comes and finds out that Zoe knows about Boo Boo bear and becomes furious. Maddie anticipates Jana to retaliate by attacking Zoe in some way.

Zoe decides to start taking birth control pills so she can have sex with Doug. Angela gets wary of her friendship with Zoe after a classmate said that Zoe thought she was flirting with Doug. Zoe denies that she made the comment but did ask Angela if she did have feelings for him. Angela indignantly denied it. Consequently, Angela becomes a bit skeptical about her friendship with Zoe and her skeptism lingers throughout the novel.

Zoe also notably spends more time with Doug than she does with Maddie and Angela which distances her from them. As Zoe becomes more codependent on Doug, Angela becomes more aware of her lack of attraction to her boyfriend Logan. Angela later admits that she doesn't really like Logan as a boyfriend to Maddie and eventually breaks up with him.

Maddie surmises that Jana started the rumors about Angela. Therefore, Maddie decides to embarrass Jana by making an announcement essentially calling her a liar to the whole school. Jana retaliates by putting Maddie's picture of her topless on Craigslist for sexual encounters. Zoe and Angela try to help Maddie and retaliate with legal charges against Jana but Maddie refuses. Regardless of Maddie's request to leave the matter alone, Angela breaks into Jana's house and leaves a note suggesting that Jana's room has been searched.

Angela later finds out that Logan was cheating on her with Jana while they were dating. Maddie gets accepted into in Santa Cruz University in California and Zoe gets accepted in Kenyon. Zoe is reproached by Doug for being to "codependent" and Angela for being passive after not avenging her when "Jana placed" a dead bird in her jeep.

Angela decides to move on from Logan. Zoe decides to stop being passive and kidnap Jana's Boo Boo bear by creating a ploy to get Jana out of her car and steal the bear. Her plan nearly succeeds but she ends up being trapped in the back seat of Jana's car and witnesses Jana yelling at her step-mother who is having an affair with a liquor store clerk. Zoe is discovered by Jana and finds out that Jana didn't actually put the dead bird in Angela's car .The novel ends with the three friends recapitulating their senior year and planning to enjoy their graduation together.

Background and writing

Lauren Myracle is a young adult writer who addresses social taboo subjects such as sex and religion in her books. She believes that kids are already exposed to these subjects and claims that her books are a mechanism in which they can explore these topics. Additionally, she believes the books enable kids to process these ideas and that such knowledge shouldn't be kept from children because it is more dangerous than not telling them at all.

Style

Each page is framed to look like an IM web page with the curser on the screen near the "send" and "cancel" button on the page. Additionally, Maddie, Zoe and Angela have their own aesthetic characteristics that differentiate them from each other. Emoji's are also incorporated in this book. The novel makes cultural references such as referring to celebrities such as Reese Witherspoon and Katie Holmes The updated ebook version of the novel refers to even more current celebrities such as Taylor Swift and Justin Bieber..

Theme

Myracle displays the theme of friendship where she presents the necessity to defend yourself and your friends. The novel also extends the theme by suggesting that friendship should be defended wisely . Maddie, Angela and Zoe have a friendship that they each try to defend against Jana. The novel suggests the attempt to defend it alone fulfills the duty to defend friendship .

Publication and reception

l8r, g8r was first published in 2007 by Abrams publishing company. The novel is popular among young adults but the majority of parents have not received the novel . One source says she is was referred to as "Satan", a "pedophile" and "corrupter of the youth" for the controversial topics that she addresses in her novel. Another source refers to the series as "sexually explicit and offensive". Despite the parental criticism, the book has resonated with the youth who felt that they can identify with the characters. Young girls have received her books well as on girl said that she felt that she had an older sister through the Myracle's books.

References

  1. Gilbert, Carol (September 24, 2015). "Banned Books Week: 'TTYL; TTFN; L8R, G8R'". Yahoo. Retrieved April 8, 2015.
  2. ^ Pesta, Abigail (April 11, 2012). "Should This Woman's Books Be Banned?". The Daily Beast. Retrieved April 8, 2015.
  3. ^ Myracle, Lauren (March 1, 2007). l8r,g8r. New York: Abram, Harry N. p. 63. ISBN 9780810970861. {{cite book}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help) Cite error: The named reference "l8r, g8r" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  4. ^ Saint Louis, Catherine. "Childhood, Uncensored". New York Times. New York Times. Retrieved May 4, 2015. Cite error: The named reference "New York Times" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  5. Gardner, Traci (July 2007). "Bold Books for Teenagers: Internet Literature for Media-Savvy Students". The English Journal. 96 (6): 96. Retrieved May 6, 2015.
  6. Lauren, Myracle (March 1, 2007). l8r, g8r. New York: Abram, Harry N. pp. 825, 3959 of 9532. ISBN 9780810970861. {{cite book}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  7. Malinowski, M. "Book review of l8r, g8r". Children's Literature Comprehensive Database. Retrieved May 6, 2015.
  8. Araujo, Meredith. . Synthasite. Synthasite. Retrieved May 6, 2015. {{cite web}}: Check |url= value (help)
  9. "l8r, g8r: The Internet Girls, Book 3". commonsensemedia. Retrieved May 6,015. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
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