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Buddha Boy

AUTHOR: Kathe Koja
ISBN: 0142402095

SHORT DESCRIPTION: Condemned as a freak at his high school, Jinsen, called "Buddha Boy" by his classmates, is paired with Justin for a class project. While Justin discovers Jinsen's artistic side, he is forced into a cruel contest with the jocks who won't leave...

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         Editorial Review

Buddha Boy
- Book Review,
by Kathe Koja

From School Library Journal
Grade 7-10-Justin-an "average" kid-serves as the interface between readers (and to some extent his schoolmates) and Michael Martin, aka Buddha Boy, whose Buddhist teacher named him Jinsen, "fountain of God." Justin mostly wants to pass through high school unnoticed (beneath the notice of the school's "royalty"), doing his work and enjoying his friends. He is fortunate to have supportive, albeit divorced, parents-another facet of the novel that sets it apart in a field full of useless adults. But Justin is stirred out of his camouflage by the animosity that the new kid incites, quite unintentionally, simply by being different. Both irritated and intrigued by Jinsen's apparent imperturbability to his tormentors, Justin is also astonished by Jinsen's artistic abilities. Koja flawlessly walks a tightrope in her presentation of Jinsen-devout without being sanctimonious, insufferable, or simply unbelievable-and solidly nails the small-minded, fearful, and even paranoid mind-set that dominates the high school milieu. Like Chris Crutcher and Chris Lynch, the author is deeply concerned with the psychological motivations for behavior and the belief that explicable causes generally underlie what may seem to be inexplicable actions. At the heart of her story is a deeply religious character who is neither naive nor clownish, neither self-righteous nor pitiful. Buddha Boy has a whole lot of action compressed into a short time span, but Koja admirably refuses to yield to melodramatic writing or black-and-white solutions. Quickly paced, inviting, and eye-opening, this is a marvelous addition to YA literature.Coop Renner, Blackshear Elementary School, Austin, TXCopyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From AudioFile
High school sophomore Justin walks the narrow line that allows him to have some friends while avoiding conflict with the popular bullies who inhabit every school. When he's assigned to a project with the new boy with a shaved head and outsized clothing, Justin worries that he'll be unable to maintain his invisibility. What follows is a burgeoning friendship as Justin learns what drives Jinsen, dubbed "Buddha Boy" by the bullies. They share a love of art, and through their work together Justin begins to understand the value of honoring oneself enough to rise above the fray. Koja's disjointed sentences lend themselves to a full-cast recording, with the various voices helping to illuminate the path Justin takes to self-awareness. Spencer Murphy does a fine job conveying Justin's fear of the unfamiliar, and Koja's author note at the end will spark discussion of the writing process, as well as the problem of dealing with bullies. S.G. © AudioFile 2004, Portland, Maine-- Copyright © AudioFile, Portland, Maine

From Booklist
Gr. 6-10. No one in the rich, suburban high school likes the weird new kid who looks like a Buddhist monk and begs at lunch. But Justin is drawn to the stranger and defends him against vicious school bullies. Koja's short novel is openly preachy, and the packed plot is absurdly contrived: the saintly outsider turns out to be an amazingly gifted artist who was once a delinquent as violent as the school bullies--until his parents died and he went catatonic and a Buddhist art teacher showed him how to find truth and beauty in art and religion . . . It's the simple writing, along with Justin's informal first-person narrative, that will draw readers to the crucial ethical issues, especially "the social-status in-out thing" among the kids, and the way school authorities accept it. Then there's the elemental question of how hard it is to do the right thing, and to keep on doing it. "We're all gods inside, right? Karma, right?" Teens will find much to talk about here. Hazel Rochman
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Publishers Weekly, starred review
A compelling introduction to Buddhism and a credible portrait of how true friendship brings out the best in people.

VOYA
A compelling tale of friendship and of finding one’s own inner strength.

Review
"Koja accomplishes quite a feat...A compelling introduction to Buddhism and a credible portrait of how true friendship brings out the best in people." -- Starred, Publishers Weekly

"A marvelous addition to YA literature." -- School Library Journal


Book Description
The kids at school call Jinsen "Buddha Boy"—he wears oversize tie-dyed dragon T- shirts, shaves his head, and always seems to be smiling. He’s clearly a freak. Then Justin is paired with him for a class project. As he gets to know Jinsen and his incredible artistic talent, Justin questions his own beliefs. But being friends with Buddha Boy isn’t simple, especially when Justin realizes that he’s going to have to take sides. What matters more: the high school social order or getting to know someone extraordinary?

Card catalog description
Justin spends time with Jinsen, the unusual and artistic new student whom the school bullies torment and call Buddha Boy, and ends up making choices that impact Jinsen, himself, and the entire school.


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         Book Review

Buddha Boy
- Book Reviews,
by Kathe Koja

Buddha Boy

ANNOTATION

Justin spends time with Jinsen, the unusual and artistic new student whom the school bullies torment and call Buddha Boy, and ends up making choices that impact Jinsen, himself, and the entire school.

FROM THE PUBLISHER

Justin spends time with Jinsen, the unusual and artistic new student whom the school bullies torment and call Buddha Boy, and ends up making choices that impact Jinsen, himself, and the entire school.

FROM THE CRITICS

Publishers Weekly

Narrated by a high school sophomore, this novel explores the tenets of Buddhism via an unlikely friendship between two classmates. In a starred review, PW called it "a compelling introduction to Buddhism and a credible portrait of how true friendship brings out the best in people." Ages 12-up. (Nov.) Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

Children's Literature - Susie Wilde

Jinsen is the hero of Budda Boy. He wears a "sloppy old T-shirt as big as a sail," begs for food at lunch, and smiles broadly and constantly even when he's being pelted with lunch leftovers. Justin, the narrator, wants to fit in and resents being hooked up with Jinsen for a project. Soon Justin's curiosity sparks a relationship that turns to caring. How can Jinsen live in a trailer with an elderly great-aunt, but own a tackle box filled with "really choice art supplies?" How can Jinsen stand emotionless when his art is destroyed and he is viciously beaten? As Justin's caring grows, so does his discomfort with bullying and his own reticence to stand up and speak out. It's not until the book's end that Justin finally learns how Jinsen's past bullying was linked to his transformation. Koja's writing is filled with constant dashes and paragraphs which begin mid sentence, as if to represent questions that tug at Justin's mind, or the way Jinsen's philosophy breaks into Justin's deadened sensibilities. These become almost a graphic element that measures how Jinsen's strength of character overcomes Justin's comfortable apathy. 2003, Farrar Strauss Giroux, Ages 11 up.

VOYA - Kim Zach

When Jinsen arrives at Edward Rucher High School coatless in winter, sporting a bald head, begging for money in the school cafeteria, and talking about karma, he is immediately dubbed "Buddha Boy" by the resident bullies. Justin, the narrator of this second novel by Koja after her Straydog (Farrar Straus Giroux, 2002/VOYA June 2002), is forced to work on a school project with Jinsen and discovers the newcomer's incredible artistic talent. Justin is frustrated by Jinsen's refusal to fight back after he is beaten and his sketchbook is mangled by his tormentors. When Jinsen transforms the muddy, blotched pages into landscapes more beautiful than his original drawings, however, Justin is stunned. Mesmerized by Jinsen's art and philosophy, Justin befriends him and learns about Jinsen's hostile past. Justin is just beginning to embrace Jinsen's pacifist principles when Jinsen's wall-size banner of the school's mascot is vandalized. Justin's rage is uncontrollable as he hunts down the boy he knows is responsible. What follows is Justin's struggle to do what is right according to Zen. By combining the elements of art and the tenets of Buddhism, Koja takes readers past the stereotypes of the picked-on kid, the relentless bully, and the rescuing friend. It is a fresh look at a familiar story, and the conclusion is satisfying without being predictable or trite. Average students can read this slim volume in one or two sessions, but even readers who are intimidated or discouraged by longer books will want to finish this compelling tale of friendship and finding one's own inner strength. VOYA Codes: 3Q 4P J S (Readable without serious defects; Broad general YA appeal; Junior High, defined as grades 7to 9; Senior High, defined as grades 10 to 12). 2003, Frances Foster Books/Farrar Strauss Giroux, 128p,

Alan Review - Laura Bullock

Justin and his friends Jakob and Megan are not total social outcasts at Rucher High, but they're not exactly part of the in-crowd—the jocks and bullies who seem to run the school. This is why they're not too keen on making the new kid's acquaintance. They don't want to be associated with a bald-headed monk in oversized T-shirts who begs for change during lunch, lives with his elderly great-aunt, and smiles even when it's clear to others he's in pain. But on his own, Justin reaches out to the artistically talented Jinsen or Michael Martin as he was known before his own transformation and in doing so, begins to contemplate the effects his actions may have on others. Justin learns the fruitlessness of anger, how hurting someone now can not only make another's life miserable, but have a negative impact on one's own life in the present and future, and most importantly, how good deeds coupled with kindness toward others can reward one immeasurably. 2003, Frances Foster Books, 128 pp., Ages young adult.

KLIATT - Claire Rosser

To quote from the review of the hardcover in KLIATT, January 2003: High school, as we all know, can be a place of torture for those students who don't "fit in." The narrator here, Justin, does fit in pretty well, and even though he hates seeing other students terrorized and bullied, he has never interfered. He sees enough to know that the main instigator of most of the outrages in the school is an especially popular and successful student named McManus, who has the power to get other students to do his dirty work and avoids punishment himself. Into this situation comes a new student, a boy with a shaved head and odd clothes. The others quickly dub him "Buddha Boy," and at first Justin shares the disdain of the other students, even though he doesn't participate in the bullying. Justin's father is an artist and Justin likes art himself, so Buddha Boy, a.k.a. Jinsen, impresses Justin when he sees his drawing ability, which is incredible. A school project brings the two together, and as Justin finds out more about Jinsen's beliefs, his home life, and his background, Justin becomes Jinsen's friend and defender. Jinsen reveals that he once was a bully himself, like McManus, and that by studying martial arts and Buddhism, he has learned to curb his anger and become nonviolent. However, when McManus, in a fit of envy, vandalizes Jinsen's art project, even Jinsen is forced to the edge of his capability to control his rage. Justin learns a great deal from his involvement in this drama and from his friendship with Jinsen. His relationship with his father grows, as does his respect for the kindness of his mother. This is a brief story, but one that is filled with action and strong feelings. For thatreason, it will capture YAs and give them a story to ponder. (An ALA Best Book for YAs.) KLIATT Codes: JS*—Exceptional book, recommended for junior and senior high school students. 2003, Penguin, Speak, 117p., Ages 12 to 18. Read all 7 "From The Critics" >


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