Rage

Rage
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A Love Story

مشارکت: عنوان و توضیح کوتاه هر کتاب را ترجمه کنید این ترجمه بعد از تایید با نام شما در سایت نمایش داده خواهد شد.
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فرمت کتاب

ebook

تاریخ انتشار

2009

Reading Level

0-2

ATOS

3.1

Interest Level

9-12(UG)

نویسنده

Julie Anne Peters

شابک

9780375893582
  • اطلاعات
  • نقد و بررسی
  • دیدگاه کاربران
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نقد و بررسی

DOGO Books
jackie13 - I decided to read this book because it sounded interesting and it was interesting. When I saw the cover I thought it was going to be a boring love story, but it was an awesome book. It is about two girls that fall in love. I thought this book was awesome because Johanna went through a lot of drama with Reeve and she still wants to be with her even though Reeve says she can't.

Publisher's Weekly


Reliable Johanna secretly fantasizes about romantic interludes with wild girl Reeve, but it's only when she agrees to tutor Robbie, Reeve's autistic twin brother, that she actually begins to understand just how troubled her anger-prone crush's life is. Johanna has her own set of problems (her parents are dead, and her relationship with her sister, Tessa, has been strained since Johanna came out), but she is still shocked when she reads Robbie's essay detailing his and Reeve's abusive childhood and by the violence she witnesses outside their shabby home. But as Johanna's romance with Reeve intensifies, so does Reeve's abuse (at a graduation party, she punches Johanna in the face). Reeve's home life may seem extremeâespecially an act of violence toward the book's endâbut readers will appreciate Peters's (Luna) incisive handling of such ambitious material. Johanna is a well-crafted character, and readers will understand her motivations, even while wishing she would listen to Tessa, who tells her, "You want to be her savior. But the way she treats you, that isn't love." Ages 14âup.



School Library Journal

January 1, 2010
Gr 9 Up-Johanna, 17, watched her mother die while her older sister escaped to college, and she fantasizes about a relationship with Reeve Hartt. Reeve's mother is a junkie prostitute, and her mother's boyfriend, no surprise, physically and sexually abuses Reeve. Reeve is hypersexual and violently angry, and she beats Johanna. The abuse in the Hartt house is so public and over-the-top that real-world children's services would have removed her long before the novel takes place. Everything happens too fast here, with YA tropesbattering, drug abuse, sexual confusion, abandonmentin place of deep character development. Both the plot and pace of "Rage" are so frenetic that there's no time to feel anything for the characters. The only vivid character is Robbie, Reeve's intelligent, deranged brother. Teens may feel set up, though, when Peters martyrs him. Johanna's fantasy segments are forced instead of sexy, intrusive instead of illuminating. Though Peters exposes girl-on-girl abuse, Janet Tashjian's "Fault Line" (Holt, 2003) and Chris Lynch's "Inexcusable" (S & S, 2005) remain better choices."Johanna Lewis, New York Public Library"

Copyright 2010 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.



Booklist

November 1, 2009
Grades 9-12 Peters (Far from Xanadu, 2005; Luna, 2004) continues to hew to the lines of realistic contemporary stories in which teens confident in their gay or lesbian orientation work through serious issues that arent necessarily related to their sexuality. In this story, graduating high-schooler Johanna has proved her maturity and reliability even before the story opens: she cared for her dying and widowed mother on her own during her junior year of high school. That doesnt mean she is without serious lessons to learn and sheand the readerlive through the compelling, compulsive love she has for Reeve, an abused peer who has herself become abusive. Peters descriptions of events, emotions, and points of view are vivid and her plotting, which here includes dramatic violence that kills off one of the central characters, is airtight. Definitely for readers who already appreciate Peters straight-on takes of gay teen life, this book may feature her best writing yet and will make her many new fans.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2009, American Library Association.)




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