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WONDERS OF THE WORLD

Grim realism about homelessness with a touch of magical realism, told in a meaningfully spare first-person voice. Eric’s father, who told him of the world’s exotic wonders, vanished suddenly years ago. The unexplained disappearance, exacerbated by his mother’s distance and his new stepfather’s cruelty, made Eric run. Now he lives on the streets of a city that was once meaningful to his father. Powerful gang leaders notice Eric and want something from him. They beat him, and murder becomes an imminent threat. Drugs and booze are already staples in Eric’s life, but sex filmed for porn is new, and he doesn’t want to do it. Acquiescing might stop a head honcho from slaughtering a girl Eric loves—or it might not. Eric is cast in a local play with mysterious similarities to his current life, but Yansky offers no over-romanticized escape through theater. Instead, the author deftly and subtly portrays Eric’s slow acknowledgement of the truth about his father, and provides an ending that, while still bleak, is livable. (Fiction. YA)

Pub Date: June 1, 2007

ISBN: 978-0-7387-1084-6

Page Count: 240

Publisher: Flux

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 15, 2007

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DIVERGENT

From the Divergent series , Vol. 1

Guaranteed to fly off the shelves.

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Cliques writ large take over in the first of a projected dystopian trilogy.

The remnant population of post-apocalyptic Chicago intended to cure civilization’s failures by structuring society into five “factions,” each dedicated to inculcating a specific virtue. When Tris, secretly a forbidden “Divergent,” has to choose her official faction in her 16th year, she rejects her selfless Abnegation upbringing for the Dauntless, admiring their reckless bravery. But the vicious initiation process reveals that her new tribe has fallen from its original ideals, and that same rot seems to be spreading… Aside from the preposterous premise, this gritty, paranoid world is built with careful details and intriguing scope. The plot clips along at an addictive pace, with steady jolts of brutal violence and swoony romance. Despite the constant assurance that Tris is courageous, clever and kind, her own first-person narration displays a blank personality. No matter; all the “good” characters adore her and the “bad” are spiteful and jealous. Fans snared by the ratcheting suspense will be unable to resist speculating on their own factional allegiance; a few may go on to ponder the questions of loyalty and identity beneath the façade of thrilling adventure.

Guaranteed to fly off the shelves. (Science fiction. 14 & up)

Pub Date: May 3, 2011

ISBN: 978-0-06-202402-2

Page Count: 496

Publisher: Katherine Tegen/HarperCollins

Review Posted Online: April 5, 2011

Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 15, 2011

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WE WERE LIARS

From the We Were Liars series

Riveting, brutal and beautifully told.

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A devastating tale of greed and secrets springs from the summer that tore Cady’s life apart.

Cady Sinclair’s family uses its inherited wealth to ensure that each successive generation is blond, beautiful and powerful. Reunited each summer by the family patriarch on his private island, his three adult daughters and various grandchildren lead charmed, fairy-tale lives (an idea reinforced by the periodic inclusions of Cady’s reworkings of fairy tales to tell the Sinclair family story). But this is no sanitized, modern Disney fairy tale; this is Cinderella with her stepsisters’ slashed heels in bloody glass slippers. Cady’s fairy-tale retellings are dark, as is the personal tragedy that has led to her examination of the skeletons in the Sinclair castle’s closets; its rent turns out to be extracted in personal sacrifices. Brilliantly, Lockhart resists simply crucifying the Sinclairs, which might make the family’s foreshadowed tragedy predictable or even satisfying. Instead, she humanizes them (and their painful contradictions) by including nostalgic images that showcase the love shared among Cady, her two cousins closest in age, and Gat, the Heathcliff-esque figure she has always loved. Though increasingly disenchanted with the Sinclair legacy of self-absorption, the four believe family redemption is possible—if they have the courage to act. Their sincere hopes and foolish naïveté make the teens’ desperate, grand gesture all that much more tragic.

Riveting, brutal and beautifully told. (Fiction. 14 & up)

Pub Date: May 13, 2014

ISBN: 978-0-385-74126-2

Page Count: 240

Publisher: Delacorte

Review Posted Online: March 16, 2014

Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 1, 2014

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