Dinky Hocker Shoots Smack!
By (Author) M. E. Kerr
Open Road Media
Open Road Media Teen & Tween
18th September 2014
United States
Children
FIC
Paperback
196
Width 133mm, Height 203mm
M. E. Kerrs first novelhailed by the New York Times as a timely, compelling, and brilliantly funny look at adolescence and friendship
It was bad enough that they had to move to BrooklynBrooklyn Heights, as Tucker Woolfs dad instructs him to tell everyone after he loses his job. Now his father has suddenly developed an allergy to Tuckers cat, Nader, a nine-month-old calico Tucker found underneath a Chevrolet. Tuckers beloved pet finds a new home with overweight, outrageous Susan Dinky Hocker, the only person to answer Tuckers ad.
As Tucker starts paying regular visits to Dinkys house to check up on Nader, his life begins to change. Dinky introduces Tucker to her strange cousin, Natalia Line, a compulsive rhymer whom Tucker finds fascinating. And enter P. John Knight, whos fat like Dinky . . . and now, like Nader. With this odd cast of characters, a little world is created for big kids who need to go on diets. And who also, all of them, need to find out who they are.
A story of friendship, self-image, and surviving adolescence, Dinky Hocker Shoots Smack! is also about the terrorand exhilarationof daring to be yourself.
[Dinky Hocker Shoots Smack!] will make you cry . . . full of wit and wisdom and an astonishing immediacy that comes from spare, honest writing. Many writers try to characterize the peculiar poignancy and the terrible hilarity of adolescence. Few succeed as well as M. E. Kerr. The New York Times
The characters ring true, every one; the dialogue has vitality and humor; the book has an integrity of conception that is a solid base for the sophistication of its wit and humor. Chicago Tribune
This authors talent is abundantly evident. . . . Wildly humorous and, at the same time, touching. Publishers Weekly
Kerrs honesty, evident respect and consistently on-target wit will keep Dinkys contemporaries laughing and nodding agreement. Kirkus Reviews,starred review
M. E. Kerr was born Marijane Meaker in Auburn, New York. Her interest in writing began with her father, who loved to read, and her mother, who loved to tell stories of neighborhood gossip. Unable to find an agent to represent her work, Meaker became her own agent, and wrote articles and books under a series of pseudonyms: Vin Packer, Ann Aldrich, Laura Winston, M. E. Kerr, and Mary James. As M. E. Kerr, Meaker has produced over twenty novels for young adults and won multiple awards, including the Margaret A. Edwards Award for her lifetime contribution to young adult literature.