Harman Patil (Editor)

Sexy (novel)

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Language
  
English

Pages
  
272 pp

Author
  
Joyce Carol Oates

ISBN
  
0060541490

Publication date
  
February 15, 2005

Originally published
  
15 February 2005

Publisher
  
HarperCollins

Country
  
United States of America

Sexy (novel) t3gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcQBHqPegB2ax4Hej

Media type
  
Print (Hardback & e-book)

Genres
  
Fiction, Children's literature, Young adult fiction

Similar
  
Joyce Carol Oates books, Young adult fiction books

Sexy is a novel by Joyce Carol Oates. First published in 2005, it is her fourth book written for young adults. The book's themes of pedophilia, homosexuality, and pre-marital sex as well as its adult language have caused it to be the source of attempts to ban the book from school libraries.

Contents

Plot summary

Sexy follows the character of Darren Flynn, a sixteen-year-old high school student and swim club member that questions his own sense of self and sexuality. He's attractive but shy, gets average grades, and constantly worries about not meeting others' expectations.

On one rainy night after a training session, Darren's friend leaves early, leaving him without a ride. His teacher, Mr. Tracy, offers to drive him home. Darren is wary of the man, who's gay but in the closet, but he reluctantly gives in. Nothing really happens on the ride home, but Darren still leaves shaken up. Shortly after, Mr. Tracy catches one of Darren's swim team members plagiarizing, gives him a bad grade, and causes that member to be thrown off the team. This prompts that member to start a rumor as revenge, and several other students start to anonymously accuse the teacher of hitting on boys; it ruins the teacher's life. Darren chose not to take part in the accusations but is now torn between his moral objections and his fear of being thought of in the same light.

Reception

Critical reception for Sexy has been positive, with Kirkus Reviews calling the book "a sympathetic portrait of a young man devoid of adult guidance". Bookpage and Teenreads both gave positive reviews, with Teenreads praising the book's themes. Publishers Weekly wrote "Rather than delineating the lines between right and wrong, truth and falsehood, Oates uses the uncertain teen's viewpoint to mine the gray area, inviting readers to draw their own conclusions about the events."

References

Sexy (novel) Wikipedia