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Monday 22 June 2015

Title: Unteachable
Author: Leah Raeder
Published: March 25, 2014
Publisher: Atria Books
ISBN: 
978-1476786407
Genre: Contemporary Romance


An edgy, sexy USA Today bestseller about falling for the one person you can’t have. 
Maise O’Malley just turned eighteen, but she’s felt like a grown-up her entire life. The summer before senior year, she has plans: get into a great film school, convince her mom to go into rehab, and absolutely do not, under any circumstances, screw up her own future. 
But life has a way of throwing her plans into free-fall. 
When Maise meets Evan at a carnival one night, their chemistry is immediate, intense, and short-lived. Which is exactly how she likes it: no strings. But afterward, she can’t get Evan out of her head. He’s taught her that a hookup can be something more. It can be an unexpected connection with someone who truly understands her. Someone who sees beyond her bravado to the scared but strong girl inside. 
That someone turns out to be her new film class teacher, Mr. Evan Wilke. 
Maise and Evan resolve to keep their hands off each other, but the attraction is too much to bear. Together, they’re real and genuine; apart, they’re just actors playing their parts for everyone else. And their masks are slipping. People start to notice. Rumors fly. When the truth comes to light in a shocking way, they may learn they were just playing parts for each other, too.  
Smart, sexy, and provocative, Unteachable is about what happens when a love story goes off-script.

Rating: 


"I see the lights every night. It seems like the whole world has figured out how to be happy, but no one's letting me in on the secret."

Okay.

Fuck.

Wow.

Guys.

This was really hard for me to rate because it was actually, like, a brilliant book. Just - really well written and engrossing and engaging and the overall quality of it should get it five stars alone.

But!

But but but.

I just couldn't connect with the characters *sad face*. 

I know this is an it's-me-not-you thing because obviously no one else had any problems connecting with Maise and Evan. But, the fact that I couldn't connect meant that their love scenes? Didn't do it for me. Their situation? I wasn't bothered. Their angst? Sorta annoyed me. And it is so frustrating for me to sit here and realise that this book is sort of incredible and I can't fully appreciate it because I couldn't drum up an affinity for the characters.

So.

I'm going to try and be objective about this.

Unteachable deserves all the hype that it has received. Like, hella.

Firstly. The writing? Woah.

"The thought of how much happiness lay scattered across the universe, unrealized, in fragments, waiting for the right twist of fate to bring it together."


I believe Leah Raeder once described her own writing as "pretentiously lyrical" and that is a completely accurate description but it actually really fucking works. There's only a certain type of fiction that can make pretentiously lyrical work; this is also true of certain types of writers. Maggie Stiefvater is one of these writers. Her books, the Raven Cycle, is an example of this certain type of fiction. Leah Raeder and Unteachable are another example. Even though the two sets of writing are pretentiously lyrical in completely different ways.

But yeah. What I'm trying to say is that Leah Raeder does with her writing what people like Tahereh Mafi epically fail at. So, the writing is incredible.

The plot is simple yet effective: Girl meets boy. Girl sleeps with boy. Girl leaves boy. Girl pines for boy. Boy turns out to be her teacher. They get it on. Repeatedly. Things start to go to shit. Formulaic and simple. Also, very fucking effective. I think the fact that the story is so realistic helps us engage with it. 

How many of us, at eighteen, had a thing for one of our teachers? How many of us, at eighteen were sexually aware enough that given half the chance we probably would have gone along with it. I remember "that" teacher for me: He was the P.E teacher. He was young, he was beautiful, he was funny and he gave a shit about us and given half the chance I would have jumped his bones.

This is something that is happening all over the world. But instead of making this about the teacher abusing his position of authority, Raeder makes this a story about two genuinely fucked up people trying desperately to pull some happiness into their lives; trying to claw out a hand-hold for themselves in the world. I never once felt like the relationship between Maise and Evan was unequal because they were both equally infatuated with each other.

In fact, Raeder gives us quite a few gritty topics in this book and then gives us a completely different way of looking at all of them: Maise's drug ruined home. Wesley's single parent home. Hiyam's privileged life. Nothing about this book is "typical."

This book deserves five stars. Because I'm emotionally stunted, I wanted to give it three. I settled on giving it four.

4/5 would bang recommend. 

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