Community Reviews

Rating(3.9 / 5.0, 99 votes)
5 stars
28(28%)
4 stars
38(38%)
3 stars
33(33%)
2 stars
0(0%)
1 stars
0(0%)
99 reviews
April 26,2025
... Show More
I have to say that this book will not be for everyone. The subject matter may disturb some readers. Having said that, I really liked it. The characters were interesting, the subject matter different, distrubing but compelling and I'd like to follow up with the next books.

Because the story deals with (among other things) two young kids whose sexual experimentation is, if not encouraged then not discouraged by the boys mother,...it may take readers aback. To me, it is a "story" and the author is not advocating sex between these two kids but is telling a story. There are many story out there that contain disturbing content that doesn't mean they are not good stories worth reading and thinking about.

Although I wouldn't reccomend this book to everyone, I did like it and it's stayed with me.
April 26,2025
... Show More
This was a good book. Although some of the characters were just plain weird, and therefore hard to feel for, it was well-written and enjoyable to read. At times seems the writer seems to have borrowed his voice from great writers of 'literature', but that doesn't make it unenjoyable. I gave it 3 starts because some of the sex descriptions - even the hilarious ones between the 13-year-olds - were a little... earthy for my taste.
April 26,2025
... Show More
SPOILERS if you're really worried about it

Way too long. I was into it when it was mostly just teenage coming of age stuff, but the story got ridiculous (pregnant 13 year olds who didn't know a thing about sex and then his mom taught them how to do it), keeping the baby, the town floozy being interested in 13 year olds, the two smartest kids in school somehow finding themselves in this situation.. just a little too much for me.

And again, it's like 400 pages. the Mom is kind of a neat character and the author successfully makes you sympathetic toward her, but really she's just trailer trash with good taste.

April 26,2025
... Show More
Supposedly (according to the cover on the version I selected on Goodreads) this was made into a movie. I found this so incredulous that I looked it up on IMDB. Apparently it was made in 2000 and is rated R so MAYBE there's hope it actually comes close to this book. There are parts of this story that hinge on the main characters (especially the kids) saying "fuck you" to someone and there's some very young kids fooling around. But Sandlin also wrote the screenplay so maybe it's as close to the book as he wanted.

The intro to this book mentions comparisons to The Catcher in the Rye, but Sam Callahan makes Holden Caufield look like a whiny little wuss. Maybe it's because this book came out in 1991 while The Catcher in the Rye was crazy for the 60s, but I think if kids are going to read an "American kid effed up novel" they should read this one instead. They'd be a lot less bored and the teachers wouldn't look like such dorks for thinking Caufield was such a bad-ass.

That said, I wonder what age you should be to get the most out of this book. It's told in a Wonder Years-like narration by a man remembering the year his family was "banished" to the middle of nowhere by their grandfather. A lot of the interesting insights come from the main character looking back. I know I can look back and think about childhood, although since this book takes place in the 1960s, there's a bit of separation there. In the end, I think any one older than the protagonists (who are 13-14) would probably get the most out of it. And anyone younger...I'd make sure they're real mature so they don't get the wrong idea.

Our main character, Sam Callahan, has the world's worst mother (with the exception of intentionally abusive mothers) who had him very young (and you find out why in a very harrowing scene) and who is responsible for getting them banned to GroVont. Sam's grandfather is the rich owner of a carbon paper plant (how we made copies before first Xeroxes and then the internet/digital cameras/scanners made all that irrelevant) and Sam's mother always does the opposite of what he wants. With the exception of one scene, I found it pretty impossible to have any sympathy for the mother. The analogy I came up with while stuck swimming the other day is - imagine if the Hiltons and Kadashians of the world, instead of indulging or allowing their daughters to be (by USA standards - immoral and bratty) punished them and threatened to cut off their money flow if they didn't behave. That'd be Lydia (mom) and Caspar's (grandfather) conflict throughout the book.

So Sam, a too smart kid that I probably would have identified with as a kid - not in the way I was treated by my parents, but feeling that all the kids around me were not up to par, is left to fend for himself in a small town where he is, if not the smartest, at least the kid with the most worldly experience. This leads him to eventually team up with Maurey, the only other kid in class who enjoys reading for fun. This leads to the title drop for the book - because these kids are very smart, they're reading way above their level - adult books. But, back then, most (many? all?) books didn't have sex scenes like they did today. The characters would get lovey-dovey and the book would "fade to black" so Sam and Maurey start wondering what happens during the "skipped parts".

What follows is a series of events that reminds me of a cross between South Park and a John Waters flick in which the adults are all either idiots or wildly irresponsible around the kids and yet, given how much more untethered kids were back then (compared to everyone saying that our generation of parents hovers too much and doesn't let kids have time off on their own) maybe this actually happened in various places?

I don't want to give away the plot and I'd recommend you don't check the IMDB page which gives away WAY too much (although you can probably see the twist coming a mile away - although there's another twist that was so great and, again, out of a John Waters film) and if you're into coming of age books (this time from a boy's perspective), I'd recommend it. Also, if you're into history as there are a few 1960s milestones that play a part in the book.

Trigger/etc Warnings:
-Rape
-underage sexual stuff
-slut-shaming
-some pretty graphic depictions of the above - so read first or be aware before handing it to that advanced kid reader in your life.
April 26,2025
... Show More

A surprisingly good read that once again highlighted the reason we have the saying "Don't judge a book by it's cover." The silly movie-tie in photos painted a very different picture than the words inside. This is my first Tim Sandlin book but it won't be my last. I was so happy to find a frank book about teenage sexuality that avoided all the cliches. This was an exciting story from start to finish as we grow up right along with Sam, a boy who's had a tough start to life but is saved by his overactive imagination and a strong inner strength. Funny, shocking, engaging and memorable, I'm so lucky that I overlooked the stupid cover.
April 26,2025
... Show More
A different kind of coming of age novel that probably portrays this subject in a more true to life fashion than some others. The story is set in 1963 and Sam Callahan is the child of an alcoholic mother and therefore is mature for his age. He is bookish and feels like an outsider when he and his mother are forced to move from North Carolina west. When he meets an adventurous girl in his class and they decide to explore the "skipped parts" of the books that they are reading, Sam's life becomes even more complicated, thanks in part to his mother's irresponsible reaction to the natural curiosity and sexual awakening of the youngsters.

This isn't an easy book to read because of the subject matter, but the characters are very well drawn and the author is a good writer. There is some tragedy and some sorrow and a lot of comedy and it was really hard to put it down despite the themes. Adult content.
April 26,2025
... Show More
This is the first of three. It's a fun book, easy reading, but so good. Funny, raunchy, honest, and full of glittering characters. I HIGHLY recommend it. The other two are good, but not as good as this one. You'll want to read them all though, to find out what happens to these awesome characters. It traces them through childhood into adulthood.
April 26,2025
... Show More
First part of the GroVont trilogy, and i had made the mistake of reading social blunders first.

The book introduces to the 13 year old sam callaghan.... and this is the problem with the book. His confidence and huimour in the 3rd book where he is well into adulthood rings true. In this book, the 13year old sounds exactly the same and this does not ring true.

Neither do his relationships with his mother, who is encouraging his sexual experiences with a 13 year old girl, Sam first wife in subsequent books until the point where she becomes pregnant - not surprising.

The two books are interchangeable - Sam is learning how to give women pleasure, rather than thinking it is the answer to all of socities ills, they are amusing outsiders and the back story of his mother is discussed to the same level - resulting in the humourous, but implausible relationship.

Amusing in parts, but i have to say that if I started with this one, I would probably not have continued, which would have been a shame as they obviously get better throughout the series.
April 26,2025
... Show More
wow.. free on kindle... loved it! sandlin writing reminds me of joe landsdale and carl hiaassen,both of whom i love! th't at first it was a bit weird and when i think of the subject content it is but i really liked it! infact started the next one(this is the first of three)as soon as i finshed this one! tho't sams' daydreams where a total kick.
give it a whirl but expect some 'out there' ideas... i'd like to meet Lydia!
April 26,2025
... Show More
I have got to admit there were a few parts of this book that had me cringing, had me wondering if I wanted to go any further. I kept going, and I am so glad I did. Sandlin is a genious. An unexpected genious. He is supposedly known for his humor but I know him now for his heart! He allows you to believe in humanity in this read. The road is long and tragic but once you arrive at the destination Sandlin has delivered you to you fully understand that all the tragedy was necessity. Beautiful.
April 26,2025
... Show More
t“Skipped Parts” a phrase indicating missing elements, whose importance is not noticed until well after they are needed, at which time the problem created by said parts being skipped is well established, of near overwhelming mass and cause for potential general panic when the void becomes widely known. For Sam Callahan, the untrustworthy narrator of this often hilarious, then by turn profane, novel, Skipped Parts refers to those moments in the fiction writing of pre-1960’s that are left to the reader’s imagination. For a 13 year-old on the brink of discovering adulthood, those parts are vital, he is curiosity about them boundless, in his pursuit of learning of these things, the fun ensues. The fun lasts until he learns why those missing parts were so important and why they were needed before he got to this point in life.
tSam and his mother, Lydia age “less than 30,” have been banished to Jackson Hole, Wyoming. The reason for their exile from Greensboro, N.C., by the hand of his Grandfather, Casper – the Carbon Paper King of America (the year being 1963, carbon paper is still in high demand but the seeds of its demise have been sown by Xerox and IBM) is a mystery to Sam. When the two had been expelled previously, it was always to more “civilized” places; “(Jackson Hole) was a mockery. Mars. Inside a vacuum cleaner bag. (p.10)” The world Sam will see a year from that observation is eons away from those early experiences. In that year he has seen enough to have returned to a safe, familiar home and found it to be enough.
tThe book follows Sam on his journey from May ‘63 to June ’64. That year huge changes Sam and the World. Both grow up, losing significant parts of their innocence, getting eyes blackened and their hearts broken, while gaining perspective and, in Sam’s case at least, a family. In all such journeys, this one is full of pain and discovery. Sam learns that not all things pleasurable bring pleasure and that just because something is difficult doesn’t mean he cannot accomplish it.
tMuch of this learning occurs with Maurey, the Blue-eyed (“eyes like Hitler” p.12) beautiful girl in his class. Lydia and Maurey are cut from the same cloth – smart, rebellious, unafraid, impulsive and mature beyond their abilities. As much as Sam comes of age in the time the reader spends with him, Lydia grows up. She and Maurey step into their appropriate roles, accepting their choices and embracing the life set before them. Sam often gets dragged into the slip stream of these two juggernauts but managing to stay upright in their wake.
tSam, Lydia, Casper, Maurey – everyone – has skipped parts that are of large value in and to life. The book ends with the suggestion that what is skipped is vital, it will find a way to be known. May God help us all when those parts reveal themselves.
 1 2 3 4 5 下一页 尾页
Leave a Review
You must be logged in to rate and post a review. Register an account to get started.