I can't believe it has taken me so long to read this. What a joy! I adored this novel. Every emotion, every tantalizing experience of growing up and coming of age can be felt through the words on these pages. The narrator/hero of the novel is Charlie, and yes, he is very precocious. I saw a lot of complaints in other reviews that he was too childlike for a 15/16 year old, but those reviewers didn't give the novel a chance. His mental stability comes full circle, and it can even be wagered that Charlie has a form of autism. He has a brilliant, beautiful mind, but Charlie spends his time waiting for direction from others. He needs to be told to participate in life. His bond with his English teacher is one of the most touching I have ever read, even though the teacher is a smaller character. His teacher always saw in Charlie what Charlie couldn't see in himself, much like his friends Sam and Patrick. Not to take anything away from the relationship between the three friends, but I have a soft spot for teachers who reach out to a singular student and become impacted by them unexpectedly.
Charlie has become one of my favorites. I celebrated his victories with him, laughed with him, cried with him. I giggled when he described his first experience with marijuana and LSD. And I related to him. Charlie spends a lot of his time wanting to belong, and when he realizes he has found a place where he feels "infinite," I rejoiced with him because I remember what that felt like, that moment of belonging to something or someone. That moment of both public and self acceptance. And even though Charlie is obscure, he ultimately stays CHARLIE, even when his suffering is revealed at the very end.
This story is about coming into your own and about the people who help us do that. And it's about that moment in life when we figure out that we're going to be okay, even if we're a little different. I LOVED it.