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Original Title: Leave Myself Behind
ISBN: 0758203497 (ISBN13: 9780758203496)
Edition Language: English
Setting: United States of America
Literary Awards: ALA Alex Award (2004)
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Leave Myself Behind Paperback | Pages: 256 pages
Rating: 4.09 | 2436 Users | 153 Reviews

List Based On Books Leave Myself Behind

Title:Leave Myself Behind
Author:Bart Yates
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:Anniversary Edition
Pages:Pages: 256 pages
Published:April 1st 2004 by Kensington (first published March 1st 2003)
Categories:LGBT. Young Adult. Romance. M M Romance. Fiction. Gay

Interpretation During Books Leave Myself Behind

Noah York is a closeted gay teenager with a foul mouth, a critical disposition, and plenty of material for his tirades. After his father dies, Noah's mother, a temperamental poet, takes a teaching job in a small New Hampshire town, far from Chicago and the only world Noah has known. While Noah gets along reasonably with his mother, the crumbling house they try to renovate quickly reveals dark secrets, via dusty Mason jars they discover interred between walls. The jars contain scraps of letters, poems, and journal entries, and eventually reconstructs a history of pain and violence that drives a sudden wedge between Noah and his mother. Fortunately, Noah finds an unexpected ally in J.D., a teenager down the street who has family troubles of his own.

Rating Based On Books Leave Myself Behind
Ratings: 4.09 From 2436 Users | 153 Reviews

Criticize Based On Books Leave Myself Behind
3.5/5Leave Myself Behind is my first Bart Yates, and up till around 60% I was convinced it was a four star read. For such a short book, Leave Myself Behind sure does try to be a lot of things: its a coming-of-age story, a coming out story, a first love story, a story about families, a (sort of) mystery, a story about grieving and loss. See what I mean? Its not that it deals with those themes badly, it's that it sure does start to feel crowded because it's all mushed into 256 pages. I liked the

When in slump, read some good YA. It almost always works for me.After an initial hiccup I was won over by brutal honesty of Noah, the narrator, enamored by him and J.D., the boy next door, falling in love with and helping each other to work through multiple problems with their parents (and they there real problems here, not "teenage world problems"). Even in YA it's rare to see that level of savoring and, for the lack of better word, beauty when it comes to feelings, without it being buried down

The life of seventeen year old Noah York is simple. He has an insane yet poetic mother, he lives in a new home where hidden mason jars hold disturbing secrets, and he is infatuated with the boy next door known as J.D. Ummm... ok... maybe it's not that simple. Noah goes through a hard moment in his life as he tries to figure out his love for D.J. and tries to hold the truth inside from his mother who is absolutely obsessed with the mason jars that lie in the walls of the new house. But lately,

Re-Read during the Great Blackout of Aught Eight...The fact that I re-read this should tell you how much I love it. I NEVER re-read fiction! This book has definitely found its way into my personal "Top 5."Protagonist Noah tries to hold his life together and finds love--all while his family and home (both literally and figuratively) are crumbling around him. The character of Noah speaks and acts like a real teenager, and handles his newfound attraction to neighbor J.D. in much the same manner. No

DNFNot in the mood to finish this one atm

I am not sure I can create a logical review based on my thoughts about this book right now. There are moments of pure brilliance and then there are 'huh what???' moments. Therefore since I am still thinking about it, I am going to go and give it a 4 star. It was much darker than I thought, rapes, beating of the two town 'queers', strange messages buried in the house, etc. Noah as a character is so compelling and his POV is so strong, that I think we could have done without some of the other

I loved this.Noah York is an unforgettable character. He's got a very honest and witty way of looking at the world. Also, he's adorable. You can't help but love him from the get-go. Noah's seventeen and living with his mom, they're trying to find a new balance after his father died unexpectedly. They've just re-located and are remodelling the old house they moved into single-handedly. But the house has a story to tell and secrets to reveal: mason jars with mistifying content pop up all over the

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