Picture Me Gone
Picture Me Gone book cover

Picture Me Gone

Hardcover – October 3, 2013

Price
$18.63
Format
Hardcover
Pages
256
Publisher
G.P. Putnam's Sons Books for Young Readers
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0399257650
Dimensions
5.75 x 0.9 x 8.5 inches
Weight
13.2 ounces

Description

From Booklist *Starred Review* Mila, 12, is something of a mentalist. She can read expressions, sense underlying emotions, and put human puzzles together. Even though her father’s lifelong friend Matthew has gone missing, Gil and Mila carry on with their plan to fly from England to Matthew’s home in upstate New York, only now, instead of a visit, the purpose of their trip is to find him. The story is presented as a mystery, and it is, but it is so much more. Rosoff, who writes each of her books differently (and often brilliantly), shapes this story as much by form and intuitions as by events. In making the choice not to use quotation marks for the dialogue, readers are immediately pushed inside Mila’s head. Every conversation is filtered through her observations; even the way she can “read” Matthew’s loyal dog, Honey, informs what she learns and understands about Matthew, including his motives and machinations. Wisely, Rosoff also provides a parallel subplot about Mila’s own best friend that anchors Mila as a recognizable 12-year-old. Without that plot point, her multinational heritage and surprising gifts might make her hopelessly “other.” As readers move deeper into the story (literally deeper as Mila and Gil find themselves in snowbound rural settings), Matthew’s situation becomes a surprising tunnel for Mila to learn more about her own father and what adults are capable of. There’s no condescension or compromise to the obvious audience either in premise or prose. It’s another choice, one that allows the book to offer its many insights on the human condition to a widespread readership. Grades 6-9. --Ilene Cooper THREE STARS for Meg Rosoff’s PICTURE ME GONE :xa0xa0STARRED REVIEW from KIRKUS REVIEWS :“A brilliant depiction of the complexity of human relationships in a story that’s at once contemplative and suspenseful.”xa0xa0STARRED REVIEW from BOOKLIST :“Rosoff, who writes each of her books differently (and often brilliantly), shapes this story as much by form and intuitions as by events . . . There’s no condescension or compromise to the obvious audience either in premise or prose. It’s another choice, one that allows the book to offer its many insights on the human condition to a widespread readership.”xa0xa0STARRED REVIEW from PUBLISHERS WEEKLY :“This thought-provoking coming-of-age story requires that readers be at least as mature as Mila as she confronts unpleasant truths . . . Mila’s sharp observations of the people she meets and the winter landscape add a fresh, poetic aura to her discoveries and the novel as a whole.” Meg Rosoff (www.megrosoff.co.uk) was born in Boston and currently lives in London with her husband and daughter. Her debut novel, How I Live Now , won the Michael L. Printz Award and was an ALA Best Book for Young Adults. Her second novel, Just in Case , won the 2007 CILIP Carnegie Medal and was an ALA Best Book for Young Adults. What I Was , Rosoff’s third novel, was short-listed for the 2008 CILIP Carnegie Medal. Her latest novel with Putnam, There Is No Dog , received four starred reviews. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • Printz Award-winning author Meg Rosoff's latest novel is a gorgeous and unforgettable page-turner about the relationship between parents and children, love and loss.Mila has an exceptional talent for reading a room—sensing hidden facts and unspoken emotions from clues that others overlook. So when her father’s best friend, Matthew, goes missing from his upstate New York home, Mila and her beloved father travel from London to find him. She collects information about Matthew from his belongings, from his wife and baby, from the dog he left behind and from the ghosts of his past—slowly piecing together the story everyone else has missed. But just when she’s closest to solving the mystery, a shocking betrayal calls into question her trust in the one person she thought she could read best.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(70)
★★★★
25%
(58)
★★★
15%
(35)
★★
7%
(16)
23%
(54)

Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

Fresh and compelling coming-of-age novel

Mila and her father have travelled all the way from England to the USA to visit one of her father's best friends who they both haven't seen in years. However, when the friend goes missing before they even arrive the two of them set out on a roadtrip in an attempt to find him. On their journey they meet an eclectic range of individuals, from a friendly waitress in a roadside diner to a teenaged boy in a cabin in the woods - and their mission to find one missing man turns into an eye-opening adventure for Mila.

I read Meg Rosoff's arguably most famous novel 'How I Live Now' several years ago and I was really taken in by this unique story and Rosoff's style of writing. In fact, I loved the novel so much that I picked it as the book I gave out on World Book Night 2013, which was my personal attempt to get more people to read it. So I was very excited when a few weeks ago I found out that the author had just released a new young adult novel and I thought the blurb sounded really interesting too.

First off I should say that this really feels like a Rosoff novel. The sentence structure is short and to the point and while the book looks small, there's a lot of story packed within the pages. Once again there are no quotation marks which I assume to mean that none of the words that are attributed to the characters can actually be taken at face value as they're all retold by the protagonist Mila herself.

The incredibly clever Mila is a delight to read about and I particularly loved discovering the US, its people and their customs through her British eyes. She's witty, wise and her astonishing perception of the world around her made for a fascinating view on and unique approach to some very serious adult themes.

The one thing that did feel implausible to me throughout the novel was that Mila is supposed to be only 12-years-old. Her remarkable intelligence aside, she consistently acted and was treated as someone at least five years her senior. With her father heavily leaning on her for support she often came across as the adult in situations she shouldn't have been put in the first place.

Her relationship with her (former) best friend Cat also felt a little out of the field and while frequently touched upon, didn't seem to serve a purpose in its own right and was left unresolved at the end. This was a shame, because a girl her own age could've been exactly what the novel needed to bring the character closer to herself, but Cat too acted much older than she really is, which added to the confusion from a reader's perspective.

These two issues aside I did find 'Picture Me Gone' an interesting and compelling coming-of-age novel. Rosoff's witty writing style suited Mila very well and made this a fresh contemporary story, recommendable for teenagers on the verge of adulthood.

3.5 stars
13 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

She has done it again!

I have been a huge fan of Meg Rosoff's writing from the first introduction of Daisy in "How I Live Now". This new novel, "Picture Me Gone" doesn't disappoint! Once again, Rosoff has brought us characters that are interesting and complicated. You can't help but care about them and their story. The writing is fabulous perhaps her best yet! "Picture Me Gone"is now one of my new favorites!
6 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Picture Me Here

Mila has an unusual way of seeing things.

She can read a room the way others read body language. She can look at every day ordinary objects and learn about the people that inhabit them. She can also read people in the same way, knowing that what they’re saying and what they actually mean often aren’t the same thing.

When her father’s best friend goes missing right before Mila and Gil are supposed to visit, they make the trip from London to America anyways to look for Matthew. However, the situation is jarring for Mila, everything is out of place.

His beloved dog, Honey, has been left at home. So have his wife and new child. What’s going on? No one would just walk away from all that. There is more going on than meets the eye, but no one looks at the world quite like Mila and she’s determined to find answers.

Mila is also worried about her friend Cat. Her parents are going through a divorce and they are tearing her world apart. Can Mila make sure that Cat is all right even as they go to another country?

Everyone involved in Matthew’s disappearance is hiding something. However, when the betrayal happens, it turns Mila’s world inside out and leaving her questioning everything she thinks she knows...

Every novel by Meg Rosoff is different. We’ve been treated to a post apocalyptic tale, a story about Fate, a historical novel and magical realism. Rosoff again changes track and gives us Picture Me Gone which is a combination of a mystery entwined around a coming of age story.

Rosoff’s strength lies in the characters and worlds she creates. Mila will pull you into her story from page one. It helps that there are no quotation marks around dialogue, so that it’s as if you’re reading Mila’s diary or thoughts.

Mila is also a phenomenal character, both sympathetic and intelligent. Her story is instantly readable because her voice is so real. It as if you’re merely reading words that are already inside you so true is Rosoff’s tone and pitch.

Rosoff also doesn’t pull any punches. Her novels always deal with life’s tougher subject without sugar coating them, particularly unusual in young adult fiction. She doesn’t talk down to her audience but instead forces us to look at the world through her characters with unflinching beauty.

It also deals with coming of age and parallels. Gil is not abandoning Matthew and Mila won’t abandon Cat. Learning about the story between Cat and Mila just deepens her character and our understanding of her.

This is a novel that deals with relationships, people we love, secrets, lies and betrayals. It is also a novel of what truth is and the strength of the human heart-and Meg Rosoff handles all these things and more with grace, beauty and aplomb.

I can’t wait to read it again.
5 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Such a WONDERFUL read!

When I was eighteen, I started reading Meg Rosoff's books (How I Live Now.) Almost ten years have passed since then, and I'm SO HAPPY that her writing continues to resonate with me (this hardly ever happens, you know what I mean??)
I love Mila. She pulled me in and kept me intrigued from start to finish. She gets inside your head and articulates feelings you never quite knew how to express. That's the feeling I look for in a great novel--universal understanding through a specific and unique character.
I loaned my copy to my mom, who is under the strange impression that YA is for kids. (She's really picky and a bit of a book snob!) I was SUPER nice and forbid myself from saying 'I told you so' when she wound up devouring this book. Now she's moving on to the rest of Rosoff's work, and I can only smile to myself. Gotcha!
Anyhow, this is an excellent book for reading groups and inter-family exchanges--it presents so many discussable ideas and truths and is at the same time a total page-turner. I'm slotting it in for my book club this spring, can't wait to read it again!
4 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Flat

The story really fell flat for me. Twelve year old Mila accompanies her aging father on a trip to America to confront the wife of his missing best friend Matt. It was rather inappropriate for Mila to be on this trip in the first place and shows the poor judgement of her parents. There is obvious tension in Matt's marriage to Suzanne over the death of their eldest son in a car accident years before. They have since had another baby in the hopes that it would save their failing relationship. Mila is a precocious child, wise beyond her years and through her unusually acute perceptive skills, begins to piece together the bigger story between Matt and those who have known him the longest, including her father. She uncovers truths she doesn't necessarily want to know and being a child, isn't truly equipped to handle. She figures out early that adults can sometimes make a huge mess of their lives, dragging others down with them as well. The problem with the story is that there is nothing here that really sticks. There are no great revelations revealed and the story itself wasn't that interesting. None of the characters elicited any kind of warmth, including Mila. The ending is inconclusive which may have worked for another type of story but not this one. Even Mila's ability to see past what appears on the surface is nothing more than just plain old paying a little more attention than your average bear. Not such a big deal when you break it down. This book is a definite case of the story not living up to the hype.
3 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Five Stars

Great
1 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Unusual Novel

My favorite characters were Mila, the preteen, and Honey, the dog. Well drawn characters and an interesting plot. Matthew comes across as selfish and self-indulgent.
1 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Great read

I was bowled over by the amazing characters meg Rosoff has created throughout this incredible novel. Mila is an absolutely extraordinary heroine. After reading this book, I gave it to my fifteen year old son, who loves it as much as I do. Now he wants to meet the author. Any ideas?
1 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Fabulous read

The book is a wonderful tale of a girl's journey. Meg Rosoff's writing is crisp, lucid and always entertaining. This is one of her best books yet.
1 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

picture a good book

Meg Rosoff is a consistently brave writer, unafraid to explore topics such as
love, betrayal, and disappointment. And she delivers. Rosoff is the real deal,
and Picture Me Gone is her best book yet.
1 people found this helpful