Itemize Out Of Books Crazy
Title | : | Crazy |
Author | : | Benjamin Lebert |
Book Format | : | Paperback |
Book Edition | : | Deluxe Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 175 pages |
Published | : | July 2001 by Goldmann (first published 1999) |
Categories | : | Young Adult. Fiction. European Literature. German Literature. Contemporary. Academic. School |
Benjamin Lebert
Paperback | Pages: 175 pages Rating: 2.92 | 1860 Users | 103 Reviews
Rendition As Books Crazy
„Hallo Leute. Ich heiße Benjamin Lebert, bin sechzehn Jahre alt, und ich bin ein Krüppel. Nur damit ihr es wißt. Ich dachte, es wäre von beiderseitigem Interesse.“ Mit diesen Worten stellt sich Benjamin Lebert an seinem ersten Schultag seinen neuen Mitschülern im Internat Schloß Neuseelen vor. Es ist sein fünfter Schulwechsel. Diesmal soll er endlich die 8. Klasse bestehen. Zusammen mit seinen fünf Freunden übersteht Benjamin die Zeit im Internat. Bei allen Unternehmungen – bei nächtlichen Besuchen auf dem Mädchengang genauso wie bei heimlichen Ausflügen ins Dorf – beschäftigt sie fortwährend die Frage, worum es in dieser ganzen Veranstaltung namens Leben eigentlich geht: um Mädchen, um Sex, um Freundschaft und ums Erwachsenwerden oder vielleicht auf einfach nur darum, immer weiterzumachen, wie verrückt die Welt und wie „crazy“ man selbst auch sein mag.
Present Books Conducive To Crazy
Original Title: | Crazy |
ISBN: | 344254159X (ISBN13: 9783442541591) |
Edition Language: | German |
Setting: | Germany |
Rating Out Of Books Crazy
Ratings: 2.92 From 1860 Users | 103 ReviewsCritique Out Of Books Crazy
Very simple language, oddly optimistic despite the situation of the main character. At moments, it is funny, yet under all the fooling about lurk some important questions about life, love, childhood and adulthood.Leberts' novel starts off pretty simple, but by the end of it I grew so attached to the characters, that I wanted to read it all over again. Lebert highlights the importance of friendship during the stormy teenage years - how memories are made, and how 'crazy' the whole experienceYet another German book, which, I understand, I am basically just reviewing for people like me, on the weird off-chance that some person stumbles upon this page and is like "well I toooo am looking for information on the level of German required for reading this book..."So, that being said, here ya go.The best thing about this book, which is also a big plus for the guy, is that, like "The Outsiders," this was published when Lebert was 17. I don't know anything about him other than that, so I
So our German class read this together and literally nobody enjoyed it at all. I didn't like the writing styles and the short sentences. I was so confused by the "philosophy" and by the drunken or sex scenes. I know that the author was just 16 years old but when I, as a 15 year old, read it I just wanted to scream and stop reading it.

I've never really put much stock into the whole 'literature for men, literature for women' thing, but this book really made me think. I didn't enjoy it. Not even a little. It was tedious and I couldn't wait to just get it out of the way and never look back. I really do think only a man could enjoy this coming of age story, certainly not women ( or is it just me?)
Meh. I've seen it all before. This book was highly deriative of The Catcher in the Rye and others of its ilk. I wouldn't have finished it at all if it weren't for the novelty that it was written by a sixteen-year-old German boy. As it was, the characters didn't grow or change, and I spent the entire book waiting for something to happen. Perhaps Benjamin Lebert just needs to grow up a little.
Most certainly something I have never experienced before really. A story of growing up in Germany as an almost-cripple at an age of sixteen, when things really matter. It's amazing how much can happen in one night, and so fast. Nonetheless I enjoyed the humor, first experiences, and best of all the wise theories on life.
i didn't thoroughly enjoy this book. It was choppy. Many times I though I had identically skipped full chapters but no that is how the book is. I wish it was longer so that we would find out more of Benjamin's life before school and in school. Many things in the book were only mentioned once and you really had to catch them. the boys would go from happy to frustrated, almost like mood swings. The boys also has several complex conversations. They made them seem too old for their age in some
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