Better Nate Than Ever

Better Nate Than Ever

By Tim Federle

2 ratings 1 review 3 followers
Interest LevelReading LevelReading A-ZATOSWord Count
Grades 4 - 8Grades 10 - 8n/a5.9n/a
“The Nate series by Tim Federle is a wonderful evocation of what it’s like to be a theater kid. Highly recommended.” –Lin-Manuel Miranda, star and creator of the musical, Hamilton

A New York Times Notable Book of the Year, a Publishers Weekly Best Book of the Year, and a Slate Favorite Book of the Year. A small-town boy hops a bus to New York City to crash an audition for E.T.: The Musical.

Nate Foster has big dreams. His whole life, he’s wanted to star in a Broadway show. (Heck, he’d settle for seeing a Broadway show.) But how is Nate supposed to make his dreams come true when he’s stuck in Jankburg, Pennsylvania, where no one (except his best pal Libby) appreciates a good show tune? With Libby’s help, Nate plans a daring overnight escape to New York. There’s an open casting call for E.T.: The Musical, and Nate knows this could be the difference between small-town blues and big-time stardom.

Tim Federle writes a warm and witty debut that's full of broken curfews, second chances, and the adventure of growing up—because sometimes you have to get four hundred miles from your backyard to finally feel at home.
Publisher: Thorndike Striving Reader
ISBN-13: 9781432875695
ISBN-10: 1432875698
Published on 3/3/2020
Binding: Paperback
Number of pages: 316

Book Reviews (1)

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Warning! This review may contain spoilers! There's this 13-year-old guy named Nate. He lives in PA, and he wants to go to NY so he can audition for the Broadway musical version of ET. So he takes his mom's ATM card, his older brothers fake ID, and some snacks, gets on a bus, and heads of to Manhattan. What I though of it: Let's start with Nate. He was a pretty good main character. He was interesting and a bit humorous. I really felt bad for Nate, because, honestly, his life sucked. His parents never let him out of the house, pretty much everyone hated him (including his older brother), he had very few friends, he was short, he was probably overweight, he had acne, his mom dressed him, etc. I personally don't think there's really anything wrong with being short, overweight (unless it causes you health problems), acne, or anything else that Nate (or society) disliked about his appearance. I mean you are who you are, and everyone's different. There's nothing that automatically makes someone unattractive in my opinion. But I'm not most people and according to society, all those things are bad (at least if you're a boy). If you're a girl (according to society), you're perfect no matter what. Yay, double standards! *insert sarcastic facial expression*. In fact, Nate literally had two things going for him. He could sing, and he could act. And he wasn't even sure about those because he hadn't ever really done either of them in front of anyone. Except his friend Libby. I'm honestly surprised the poor kid didn't need counseling. Nate seemed dislike is parents. Especially his dad. He seemed dislike his dad and resent him for being a janitor. I really didn't see why. I mean sure, his dad didn't make a lot of money, but that's no reason to resent him. Besides him being a janitor I really didn't know any other reason for Nate to really not like his dad, but for some reason, he really didn't like him. One of my favorite parts of the book was when Nate's mom showed up and Nate was rude to her. I mean it seemed kind of out of character, but I still loved it. When I was reading that part I was just thinking "Yeah, you go Nate! Tell that women!". I personally found Nate's mother more dislikable than his father (though neither were great people). The reconcile between Nate's mom and Aunt was rushed and made no since. They just started hugging each other and suddenly, they're ok with each other again. It made literally no since. I pretty much disliked all of Nate's (household) family, but I think I might have been supposed to. Nate's (and his aunt's) experience with religion really saddened me. It just reminds me that it really is religious people who bring a bad name to religion. Even though it was somewhat accurate, I kind of wish the book hadn't painted all religious people with the same brush. We aren't all like that. My favorite character was Freckles. He wish he was in more of the book. He was really awesome, and I was kind of sad that we never got to learn his real name. Some parts of the book were unrealistic and sometimes the character's seemed to kind of stupid. The plot was pretty good. The writing was fine. One part of the book that kind of annoyed me was all the crying. It seemed like every few chapter, someone was crying about something. It got old after a while. Something else that annoyed me was it always seemed like Nate was going to get cut, but then he ends up not getting cut. That that's a tool that's used in movies and books all the time. And it's not a bad one. I mean it works about twice, but if you do it 4 to 6 times in one book, it gets old and eventually the reader catches on. There are quite a few curse words (most of them aren't fully spelled out, but you definitely know what the word is). They used one particular word quite frequently to describe Nate. It really bothered me that pretty much every character that met Nate (and was antagonistic towards him) called him that word. I don't think it was necessary, and I'm really not sure how realistic it was. Pretty sure him his one brother called him it. I enjoyed certain parts of the book, some of them being pretty much all of the conversations involving Freckles. Most of the characters were pretty good. It was paced pretty well, it being almost (almost) 300 pages and taking place over the course of 2 or 3 days. To be honest, this book probably doesn't deserve 4 stars, but I definitely couldn't give it 3. Overall, it was a pretty good book.