What If? A Review of Me, Myself, and Him

Chris Schweitzer is looking forward to his last summer before college, hanging out with his best friends Anna and Wexler in their small town in Ohio. One bad move, though, changes everything—or not. After work one night, he passes out from doing whippets (the age-old method of getting high by inhaling from an empty whipped cream can). In one universe, he becomes the subject of a newspaper article on the dangers of teenage drug abuse. In the other, no one but his best friends and creepy co-worker Mitch find out. Things look bad for Chris when he’s caught, as he’s sent to live with his estranged father in southern California, work at his father’s lab, and attend group therapy. But bad luck has a way of turning into good when Chris meets a handsome surfer and he experiences his first romance. And what looks like good luck turns bad when Anna and Wexler grow increasingly close, freezing out Chris, and Mitch tries to blackmail him into friendship.

Tebbetts has written a smart, funny novel that explores choices and consequences. Whether or not he intended to, accepting responsibility for a bad decision leads Chris to a greater understanding of himself, his father, and the rest of his family, as well as to a love interest. Getting away with something, however, isolates him with his secrets and leads him into increasingly stickier situations. Will Chris reach the same point of self-awareness, no matter what? Me, Myself, and Him raises that questions as it leads readers to think about the range of future possibilities that can result from their words and actions now.

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