Permanent Record, Leslie Stella
Permanent Record, Leslie Stella
List: $35.99 | Sale: $25.20
Club: $17.99

Permanent Record

Author: Leslie Stella

Narrator: Nick Podehl

Unabridged: 7 hr 54 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 03/05/2013


Synopsis

Being yourself can be such a bad idea. For 16-year-old Badi Hessamizadeh, life is a series of humiliations. After withdrawing from public school under mysterious circumstances, Badi enters Magnificat Academy. To make things "easier", his dad has even given him a new name: Bud Hess. Grappling with his Iranian-American identity, clinical depression, bullying, and a barely bottled rage, Bud is an outcast who copes by resorting to small revenges and covert acts of defiance, but the pressures of his home life, plummeting grades, and the unrequited affection of his new friend, Nikki, prime him for a more dangerous revolution. Strange letters to the editor begin to appear in Magnificat’s newspaper, hinting that some tragedy will befall the school. Suspicion falls on Bud, and he and Nikki struggle to uncover the real culprit and clear Bud’s name. Permanent Record explodes with dark humor, emotional depth, and a powerful look at the ways the bullied fight back.

About Leslie Stella

Leslie Stella is the author of three previous novels of contemporary adult fiction, Unimaginable Zero Summer, The Easy Hour, and Fat Bald Jeff. She was a founding editor of the Chicago-based politics and satire magazine Lumpen, and her work has been published in The Mississippi Review, The Adirondack Review, Bust, Easy Listener, and anthologized in The Book of Zines: Readings from the Fringe (edited by Playboy’s Chip Rowe), a collection of essays and articles from the obsessive, frequently bizarre world of zines. Leslie was nominated for a 2004 Pushcart Prize in short fiction. Permanent Record is her first novel for young adults. She lives in Illinois with her husband and their children.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Renée on March 06, 2013

This was such a unique novel for me, in so many ways. First of all, Stella's choice to use an Iranian/American protagonist was such a refreshing change of pace in a world of YA fiction where I find that, overwhelmingly, the landscape tends to favor main characters of a more uniform persuasion. The fac......more

Goodreads review by Joe on April 16, 2013

Yes, I gave this book five stars. Because this is a book that will stop people in their tracks, will inspire. I'm not gonna lie, I teared up a little bit at the end, too. I think it's Stella's best book, hands-down. Absolutely complete, there are no holes in this story--it's tight, compelling, heart......more