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THE SECRET LANGUAGE OF SISTERS

Choppy and an issue book to the core, though certainly effective on the texting-and-driving message.

Nature, photography, sisterhood, and severe consequences for texting while driving.

Sisters Roo, 16, and Tilly, 14, live right where the Connecticut River meets Long Island Sound. Between Roo’s stunning photographs (of river, beaches, marshes, and people) and her off-the-charts academic test scores, she’s a shoo-in for Yale—until one fateful day. Roo’s late picking up Tilly; Tilly pesters her by text, demanding a response; Roo glances down to reply “5 mins away” and flips her car, ending up paralyzed and in a coma. The sisters alternate first-person narration. Via Roo’s chapters, readers know long before her family and doctors that she’s actually not in a coma—she has locked-in syndrome and can’t move, but she’s fully sentient and as sharp as ever. Themes are plentiful and include guilt and confession; recovery (Roo uses a brain-computer interface to communicate and eventually take photos with her one mobile eye); boyfriends and loyalty; and, of course, the warning about texting while driving. Textual insistences that the sisters are best friends with an unbreakable relationship and that Roo’s the most “special, luminous girl”—both before and after paralysis—are unduly explicit, and Tilly’s voice is sometimes uncharacteristically florid. White characters are white by default, while characters of color are specified, stereotyped, and mainly present to supply support and wisdom.

Choppy and an issue book to the core, though certainly effective on the texting-and-driving message. (Fiction. 12-15)

Pub Date: Feb. 23, 2016

ISBN: 978-0-545-83955-6

Page Count: 352

Publisher: Point/Scholastic

Review Posted Online: Nov. 2, 2015

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Nov. 15, 2015

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GAME CHANGER

Haddix’s insightful tale is a compelling blend of sports, action and mystery.

An elite athlete, KT is on the fast track to softball stardom when her world is turned upside down.

The eighth-grader’s life drastically changes when she collapses while pitching during a major tournament. Awakening to an alternate reality, KT discovers the traditional roles of academics and sports have been reversed. Now, KT’s younger and supremely nonathletic brother, Max, is the focus of family life due to his status on the school’s math team. Yet KT soon realizes she is not the only one who wants out of this other world. Ultimately, she must figure out the common ground among an athlete, a genius and a video gamer and determine what issues drove them into this altered reality. While the premise of the sports/academics switch provides some humorous scenarios, it also conveys a powerful message. Haddix illuminates the pressure middle school–aged students often feel to conform to predetermined roles. Her cleverly constructed tale gives a voice to all students, encouraging them to look beyond the labels of sporty, smart and so on, to define themselves. KT’s transition from athlete to advocate is calculated to inspire readers to celebrate their individuality.

Haddix’s insightful tale is a compelling blend of sports, action and mystery. (Fantasy. 12-14)

Pub Date: Oct. 16, 2012

ISBN: 978-0-689-87380-5

Page Count: 256

Publisher: Simon & Schuster

Review Posted Online: Aug. 7, 2012

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 1, 2012

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SWIM THAT ROCK

Nevertheless, fills the bill for teens looking for an atypical action adventure.

A teen goes to desperate lengths to save his family’s diner in this unevenly executed fishing drama set on Narragansett Bay.

Fourteen-year-old Jake Cole’s father was lost at sea last year. Since then, he and his mother haven’t been able to keep up with the family diner’s mortgage payments to the local loan sharks. His mother is ready to give up and move in with his grandmother in Arizona, but Jake has a plan. Previously polluted Barrington Beach is about to be reopened for quahog harvesting. If he and his father’s old quahogging buddy Gene can pull enough clams once the beach reopens, they may be able to raise most of the mortgage money. Jake is working on getting the rest of the money by illegally fishing at night with a mysterious man he calls Captain, who claims to have known his father. But when Gene is hurt in a boating accident, Jake must work Barrington Beach alone. Can he pull enough quahogs to pay off the mob? While the distinct, clearly realized setting details distinguish this title from the vast schools of novels for young teens swimming in the publishing sea, choppy pace and perfunctory dialogue drag it down to the ocean floor.

Nevertheless, fills the bill for teens looking for an atypical action adventure. (map) (Fiction. 12-15)

Pub Date: April 8, 2014

ISBN: 978-0-7636-6905-8

Page Count: 294

Publisher: Candlewick

Review Posted Online: Jan. 28, 2014

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 15, 2014

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