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Reviews

"There is a lot of nostalgia and fun in here
-- but this is a meaningful look at the impact of adolescence spent in a
unique American institution."
BOOKLIST
You can take the boy and
girl out of high school ... but can you take high school out of that boy
and girl, even when adults? In essence this is the provocative question
posed by this witty book that manages to use the light touch in probing
serious questions of personality development.
LOS ANGELES TIMES
Keyes manages to sum up
the common denominator of experiences we shared, no matter which high
school we attended and the perspective in which we see our high school
days now ... a captivating book.
WEST COAST REVIEW OF
BOOKS
Keyes brings back the
sights and sounds, and most importantly, the feelings, of our high
school experience.
INDIANAPOLIS NEWS
Beneath the banter, the
all-too-vivid recollections of the sock-hop, the prom, the yearbook
caption under your photo, Keyes makes a serious and pathetic
observation: there are people for whom high school is the peak, the
zenith of their success and achievement. After graduation, it's downhill
all the way.
KIRKUS REVIEWS
Whether you were jock or
bookworm, an "innie" or an "outie" you will relish the shock of
recognition and, perhaps, furtively consult your yearbook. Sociology
that amuses as it informs.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
A delightful book ...
both insightful and fun.
GREENSBORO DAILY NEWS
Deliciously titled ...
breezy ... very good book.
NATIONAL OBSERVER
Keyes has turned in a
serious psychological study. His book is funny, but it isn't frivolous.
SANTA BARBARA NEWS-PRESS
A good, thoughtful,
albeit disturbing book about how four years of one's adolescence,
consciously or otherwise, affects the following years of alleged
maturation.
PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER
The book is worth
reading, if only to refresh your memory about what you're compensating
for.
CHARLOTTE OBSERVER
Witty, angst-ridden
confessional of the joyous and heart-rending memories of high school ...
will start up hunts for yearbooks.
AUSTIN AMERICAN-STATESMAN
Frequently poignant,
occasionally profound, and very funny.
ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH
Much more than just a
pleasant exercise in nostalgia; it's a learning aid -- a piece in that
puzzle of what makes us the way we are and why.
SAN DIEGO UNION
Thoroughly engaging.
WASHINGTON POST
Frequently poignant,
occasionally profound, and very funny.
ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH
Unmarred by academic
jargon, more intellectually respectable than pop sociology, more
informative than scores of treatises on adolescent behavior, Is There
Life After High School? is a joy to read.
SCHOOL REVIEW
In a humorous vein, Keyes
refreshes our memories with numerous interviews, magazine articles, and
the findings of social scientists. We are reminded that priorities are
seen through a different set of lenses when we are passing through the
corridors of high school. Keyes's success in this undertaking is ensured
by his use of clever questionnaires and witty nostalgic trips through
the past lives of each modern-day generation.
THE SCHOOL COUNSELOR
Remains one of the few
books to deal with the sociological aspects of high school.
Doug Carroll, THE ARIZONA
REPUBLIC, July 4, 2000 |