- Published: 10 January 2013
- ISBN: 9781448173174
- Imprint: Penguin eBooks
- Format: EBook
- Pages: 320
The Tragedy Paper
- Published: 10 January 2013
- ISBN: 9781448173174
- Imprint: Penguin eBooks
- Format: EBook
- Pages: 320
Tim’s first-person voice is a compelling combination of compassion and analysis, revealing his lifelong challenge of albinism, the unexpected romantic triangle he enters into, and choices that set in motion unfortunate events. . . . A playful element infuses the story as tragic themes described in English class play out in the characters' dramas, adding texture to this strong debut.
Publishers Weekly
Debut novelist LaBan takes us into the private school culture as well as the heads of two charming yet very different teenage boys and their parallel love stories . . . Nonexistent parents, well-intentioned, likeable faculty on the periphery, elaborate dorm rooms with overstuffed closets, even the romantic, snow-covered campus all contribute to a setting that adds to the story’s heft and intrigue.
Starred Review, Booklist
This coming-of-age story is unique in its telling and its lack of hurriedness. Laban’s heroes are meant to be cheered and pitied, and the way their stories are handled is masterful. With plot and character construction similar to those of writers like John Green, and a hearkening to stories like The Dead Poet’s Society, this novel deserves a place on most library shelves.
Voya - Amanda Fensch
LaBan’s debut – reminiscent of Jay Asher’s Thirteen Reasons Why – compassionately illustrates the tragedy of withholding love and friendship, or worse, never having the courage to seek them out.
Entertainment Weekly
Even though it's only January, The Tragedy Paper is already one of my favourite reads of 2013.
thepagesage.blogspot.co.uk
This book is an intriguing, mysterious story of loneliness, heartbreak, and how you can learn from others’ mistakes.
bethanyelarson.com
This novel is relatable and unusually gripping, even for an older reader - full of slings and arrows and outrageous fortune. Readers should find themselves fairly ripping through the pages to uncover the mystery of what happened, and why . . . Romantic love, hard work, loyalty, friendship, suffering: Like the great tragedies that inspired the novel, it's all here. LaBan's take on adolescent life is rendered in the sweet, intelligent tradition of John Irving, but without any of the prep-school genre's self-satisfaction. And in the end, this story is about more than personal failure (and triumph), or the nature of tragedy. It's also a story about art and how it can redeem us.
The Philadelphia Inquirer
The Tragedy Paper has the earmarks of what will one day be a true literary classic . . . LaBan brings to life a rich cast of characters, each struggling with their own definitions of a 'tragedy' and the trials of adolescence and growing up.
novelnovice.com
Escape with this mystery that will keep you searching for the answer to: what really happened? . . . This page-turner is told from Tim and Duncan's perspectives as Duncan finds the key to writing the biggest, most scandalous Tragedy Paper of all Irving School history. Trust us when we say a school assignment has never been this intense!
Seventeen.com
An astonishing and beautiful read that is just dripping with atmosphere.
Lindsay Foley, Sugarscape
The story is perfect . . . the writing is simply outstanding . . . this was an absolutely gorgeous story to read.
Excellentreads.blogspot