nick-and-norahWhat’s on my nightstand? Nick and Norah’s Infinite Playlist, by Rachel Cohn and David Levithan.

For the record, I prefer book covers to movie-covers-on-books, but I also take what I can get, and this is the cover I got.

The story chronicles the events of one night when Nick, the bassist for a punk band, meets Norah, daughter of a music bigwig and devoted punk fan and critic. Both are raw from recent heartbreaks, and this chance meeting throws them into a whirlwind of dread, doubt, discovery, and ultimately delight.

This was on my recommended reading list because I really liked David Levithan’s writing and perspective in Boy Meets Boy. I’m also attracted to the alien world of urban teendom, which seems to be where Levithan lives, literally and figuratively. Is there any greater opposite to “city girl” than moi? I am almost as distant from the music world that frames the story. I guess that makes this somewhat of a fantasy for this reader, eh?

Again, I like the way David Levithan tells a story and draws out emotion, even if teen emotions are sometimes too much for me. What I liked best of all, was the dual perspective.

While I love watching a single author pull off multiple voices and perspectives, I’m equally fascinated in watching multiple writers work together. It’s a whole ‘nother ball-o-worms.

What I gather from the FAQs on Rachel Cohn’s site is that David wrote a chapter from Nick’s perspective and sent it Rachel, then Rachel wrote a chapter as Norah and sent it back. They started with a very vague idea and let the story unfold organically.

How fun is that? I want to do that!

My critique group batted around an idea in which all six of us would collaborate on a multiple POV story, but we never got it off the ground. I think we tried to plan it too much, and I think maybe, just maybe, our tastes are too varied to be easily compatible. I don’t think we ever even settled on a target age range. And, of course, six POVs may be too many to coordinate under the best circumstances.

David and Rachel, however, succeeded brilliantly. I loved the back and forth between the two points of view and watching them weave together.

Your turn. What are you reading?