The World of Normal Boys Audiobook By K.M. Soehnlein cover art

The World of Normal Boys

A Novel

Preview

Audible Standard 30-day free trial

Try Standard free
Select 1 audiobook a month from our entire collection of titles.
Yours as long as you’re a member.
Get unlimited access to bingeable podcasts.
Standard auto renews for $8.99 a month after 30 days. Cancel anytime.

The World of Normal Boys

By: K.M. Soehnlein
Narrated by: Blake Kevin Dwyer
Try Standard free

$8.99 a month after 30 days. Cancel anytime.

Buy for $21.85

Buy for $21.85

Winner of the Lambda Literary Award

"This first novel is so eloquent because it is hellbent on collaring the reader and telling him or her the whole passionate story." (Edmund White, author of Our Young Man)

"This is a rich and unflinching book." (The New York Times Book Review)

"Extraordinary...an exhilarating experience...that Soehnlein has produced as his first novel a work of such maturity and excellence is little short of astounding." (Fenton Johnson, author of Scissors, Paper, Rock)

The time is the late 1970s—an age of gas shortages, head shops, and Saturday Night Fever. The place, suburban New Jersey. At a time when the teenagers around him are coming of age, Robin MacKenzie is coming undone. While "normal boys" are into cars, sports, and bullying their classmates, Robin enjoys day trips to New York City with his elegant mother, spinning fantastic tales for her amusement in an intimate ritual he has come to love. He dutifully plays the role of the good son for his meat-and-potatoes father, even as his own mind is a jumble of sexual confusion and painful self-doubt. But everything changes in one, horrifying instant when a tragic accident wakes his family from their middle-American dream and plunges them into a spiral of slow destruction.

As his family falls apart day by day, Robin finds himself pulling away from the unquestioned, unexamined life that has been carefully laid out for him. Small acts of rebellion lead to larger questions of what it means to stand on his own. Falling into a fevered triangle with two other outcasts, Todd Spicer and Scott Schatz, Robin embarks on an explosive odyssey of sexual self-discovery that will take him beyond the spring-green lawns of suburbia, beyond the fraying fabric barely holding together his quickly unraveling family, and into a complex future, beyond the world of normal boys.

"Karl Soehnlein's stunning first novel reads like a cross between the film American Beauty and Edmund White's A Boy's Own Story." (The Advocate)

"The World of Normal Boys is a work of authenticity, as relevant to those who lived a similar coming-of-age experience many years ago as it will be to those who are living that experience now." (Bay Area Reporter)

"An amusingly detailed and largely accurate picture of life in the Jersey 'burbs." (Publishers Weekly)

"Full of tension and suspense, Soehnlein's well-paced debut novel is a fresh look at one boy's sexual awakening in the 1970s and his journey to find a place where he can fit it." (Booklist)

©2000 K.M. Soehnlein (P)2023 Audible, Inc.

Accolades & Awards

Lambda Literary Award
2001
Lambda Literary Award Literature & Fiction Family Life Historical Genre Fiction Fiction Historical Fiction
Realistic Story • Understated Effective Performance • Well-written Story • Hypnotic Narration • Good Dialogue Delivery

Highly rated for:

All stars
Most relevant
I liked the book very much. A very well-conceived and written story. The narration was interesting. Not a lot of drama in his voice which I decided I appreciated. It made moments of intensity all the more powerful. A book I recently read, My Love Story, by Tina Turner, was narrated by someone who loaded each sentence with dialed up drama. It was ridiculous. So it was a pleasure to have a story read more simply with emphasis in just the right places. As you can see, I have given it five stars across the board.

Understated and effective performance

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.

There were parts of this that I loved, but I also thought the focus on the sex life of thirteen year old Robin was a little skeevy. I had sex for the first time at barely sixteen, and I think I was a little ahead of most of my peers (this was in the mid 80s, just a little later than the book is set). Robin also often has a kind of world weariness that seemed ahead of his years, although his moments of confusion and acting out are very authentic.

Soehnlein has a great sense of family dynamics, and there are some lovely vivid moments.

The narration is just okay. The reader does a good job with dialogue but often settles into a kind of robotic cadence.

Sweet but maybe a little too sexy

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.

What a beautiful and devastating book. I absolutely loved it. I highly recommend it. Grab it!

Love This Book

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.

The cliff hanger at the end & the resolve to a love lost to society. The fact that Robbin never came out & stayed in the shawdos of his sexuality. much like myself. A lifelong regrett I shall take to my grave.

The mirror of my own

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.

Wow, what a powerful debut novel. I lived through that period. While my experiences widely differ from those of the protagonist, Robin, the book was accurate in describing the mixed-signals that gay teens sent in that era and their struggle for normalcy. The book is grounded in a moment of time and feels timeless, universal even. This is powerful writing that made me want to cheer or cry. I highly recommend it.

Incredible!

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.

See more reviews