Ready, aim…


Nick & Norah’s Infinite Playlist

By Rachel Cohn & David Levithan

“Then it hits me.
‘Maybe we’re the pieces,’ I say.’”

Summary

Nick & Norah’s Infinite Playlist centers Nick, a bassist with a hardcore crush on a young woman who is all wrong for him, and Norah, the daughter of a record exec who’s finally discovering her on-again, off-again relationship is toxic. When Nick asks Norah to pretend to be his girlfriend for five minutes to make his crush jealous, Norah goes above and beyond, and the two of them spin out into a single, loud, lovely New York City night.

Quick Info

  • Year of Publication: 2007
  • Number of Pages: 183
  • Awards/Nominations: Cybils Award, ALA Best Books for Young Adults, ALA Quick Picks for Reluctant Young Adult Readers, CCBC Choices

Why I Chose to Read Nick & Norah’s Infinite Playlist

I love music and New York City, and I was hoping to find a YA romance that wasn’t so saccharine.

Teaching Considerations

Audience: Booksellers list this as “14-17 years.” Lots of vulgarity. While I agree that this is a fun romance for this age range, I wonder if the dated musical and pop culture references make it best suited to an older audience… like me!? Hah!

Key Themes: love, music, connection, escaping past relationships, teens who don’t drink or do drugs, Judaism, interfaith, and LGBTQIA+.

Grouping Recommendation: This would be a great student-choice book in a voice, perspective, or romance unit. It’s also brilliantly composed in a way that lends to a potential film adaptation, and can be taught as such.

Instructional Ideas:

A masterclass in simplicity, this book is about two characters who help each other escape their romantic pasts and feel out healthier, happier romantic futures.

Key Excerpts

How might this car show the difference between Nick and Norah’s lives? Are you sure? How do you know? Do you have a first car/vehicle story? If not, what’s your story?

The authors of this book are not teenagers. Do you think they’ve nailed the YA voice? Why or why not? Explain your reasoning with examples.

Here, Norah uses a Judaic concept to make sense of the world around her. Can you relate? If so, how? If not, what do you use to help you make sense of the world?

Book Talk Excerpt:

How do the authors write like music? What have they done here to create formatting that agrees with content? How else do they accomplish this throughout the book?

My Thoughts and Reflections

★★★★★

This was a sweet book, and it reminded me of my “glory days” traipsing around the Lower East Side, listening to live music. Except the characters made much better decisions than I ever did! The character voices weren’t as distinct as I expected, given that two authors worked together on this book. However, I bought the young Jersey couple with similar interests, who were well suited. I’d recommend this to high school ELA students, Millennials, Gen Xers, and anyone looking to write a book that’s perfect for an indie film adaptation.

Topics/Ideas/Books/Authors I’m Curious About As A Result of Reading Nick & Norah’s Infinite Playlist

I’d like to watch the film and compile a list of great YA books with film adaptations!

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