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Last December

par Matt Beam

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Written in the form of a suicide note from a teenaged boy to his unborn sister, tells the story of how a ninth-grader comes to accept his less than ideal life after witnessing the struggles of a friend with serious depression.
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4 sur 4
Kind of reminiscent of Punkzilla, a first person, stream of consciousness, narration without the edge.

Contrary to the book cover of a boy with hockey equipment over his back, Last December is not about hockey. Steve tries out for the team in his new high school. He doesn’t make the team but makes a friend in Trevor. The story is told by Steve in a series of letters to his future baby sister about what happened that December. The prose style is almost stream of consciousness, jumping from one thought to a completely different thought at times, which can get confusing and is not all that compelling. Steve feels like his life is a mess and he’s confused. He and his pregnant single mom had to move and Steve began high school in a new town. He isn’t getting along with his mother and is unsure how he feels about having a new sibling. He is confused about girls and friends and where he fits in. He meets an older teen, Byron who teaches him about Ms. Pacman and his philosophy on life even though as time goes on Steve knows something is wrong with Byron. He goes to parties with his new friends, Trevor and Alistair, and experiments with drinking to disastrous results and makes a fool of himself in front of his crush, Jenny. This coming of age story might appeal to boys who like sports but are not necessarily jocks. ( )
  Dairyqueen84 | Mar 15, 2022 |
Realistic fiction. Well-written but not terribly compelling. ( )
  Sullywriter | Apr 3, 2013 |
Reviewed by Sally Kruger aka "Readingjunky" for TeensReadToo.com

When his mom's boyfriend takes off, Steven's relieved. He never really liked Mike. Unfortunately, Steven's mom is pregnant. She says she's having a girl, and they begin calling her Sam.

Steven's dad died when Steven was only one. He doesn't know a thing about him. Now, about to have a little sister who also won't know her dad, he sets about trying to explain things to her. He begins to write Sam a letter. He's not sure when or if she will ever read it, but he writes about everything that's happened to them last December.

There was the new high school and Steven's desire to be part of the hockey team. There was a fight with a group of skinheads and the threat that they might come back for more. There was the irresistible Jenny and new best friend, Trevor, who got Steven involved in the high school social scene. There was Byron, the Ms. Pac-Man playing stranger, who always seemed to show up at the Donut Hole. All of these are intertwined in Steven's letter, along with the stress and pressure of being the man in the family for his pregnant mother and his soon-to-be little sister.

LAST DECEMBER describes Steven's struggle to adapt to the normal ups and downs of being a teen at the same time he comes to terms with being there for a mother about to become a single mother of two children. Using the concept of a letter, author Matt Beam takes his readers directly into Steven's thoughts as he attempts to provide history and guidance for his unborn sister. ( )
  GeniusJen | Feb 27, 2010 |
So this is how 15 year old boys think! Steven's writing a long letter to his yet to be born sister about what's been happening in his life, because he's acting weird and needs to figure out why. He can't put anything in words to his mother, or to anyone else for that matter. Some of the letter is about the new baby (he really doesn't want to think about that), some of it is about the girl he likes, and some of it is about the older boy he met who has fascinating and incomprehensible theories about life but maybe isn't as together as he initially seems. He not only reports on the day to day events, but also tells what he was thinking throughout -- even though generally he freezes up, turns on the hockey game and says, "whatever". Beam totally captures boys at this age, and leaves the reader wincing at every stupid decision while rooting for him throughout. Includes drinking to the point of passing out and emerging sexuality. ( )
  ChristianR | Jan 22, 2010 |
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Written in the form of a suicide note from a teenaged boy to his unborn sister, tells the story of how a ninth-grader comes to accept his less than ideal life after witnessing the struggles of a friend with serious depression.

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