![]() ![]() There is something about Charlie’s desperate longing make friends and fit in that resonates with everyone. It is impossible to read this novel without drawing parallels to one’s own teenage years, and I think that is part of the brilliance of Chbosky’s story. The first question I had was, “Who is Charlie writing these letters to?” This question could have spoiled my enjoyment of the book, but thankfully I was able to put it out of my mind and allow myself to become emerged in Charlie’s adolescent world. ![]() ![]() I struggled a bit settling in to this novel because I was trying to hard to figure it out. ![]() The first twenty pages or so were a bit confusing. The Perks of Being a Wallflower is one of those books that I’ve been hearing about for years, but never actually got around to reading. Constantly second-guessing himself and filled with confusion and anxiety, Charlie observes the world around him with a perspective vastly different from the average teenage boy. His letters detail important milestones such as first dates, making friends, doing drugs, and attending screenings of the Rocky Horror Picture Show. In a series of letters, sixteen year old “wallflower” Charlie writes about the slow, stumbling, and sometimes scary transition from adolescence to adulthood. ![]()
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