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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

2020

Lexile Score

820

Reading Level

3-4

ATOS

5

Interest Level

9-12(UG)

نویسنده

Patricia McCormick

شابک

9781423141112
  • اطلاعات
  • نقد و بررسی
  • دیدگاه کاربران
برنده جایزه کتاب ملی قدرتمند، پرتوان و پرفروشترین، به دختر جوانی که دوران کودکی خود را از دست داده است، با این حال مصمم به پیدا کردن قدرت برای پیروزی است لاکشمی یک دختر سیزده ساله است که با خانواده اش در یک کلبه کوچک در کوهستان در نپال زندگی می کند. با این که به شدت فقیر است، زندگی‌اش پر از لذت‌های ساده است، مانند بازی کردن ویسکی با بهترین دوستش از مدرسه، و داشتن موی سرش در نور چراغ نفتی. اما پدر ناتنی لاکشمی گفت که وقتی مانسون های خشن هیمالیا تمامی بقایای خانواده را می شوید, او باید خانه را ترک کند و برای حمایت از خانواده اش کاری پیدا کند. او او را به یک غریبه با نشاط معرفی می کند که به او می گوید او برای او به عنوان یک خدمتکار در شهر پیدا خواهد شد. لاکشمی با خوشحالی برای کمک، به هند سفر می کند و به «خانه خوشبختی» می رسد پر از امید. اما چیزی نگذشت که به حقیقتی غیر قابل تصور پی برد: او به تن فروشی فروخته شده است. یک پیرزن به نام ممتاز با بی رحمی و زیرکی فاحشه خانه را اداره می کند. لاکشمی میگوید که تا زمانی که بتواند بدهی خانواده اش را بپردازد در انجا به دام افتاده است - و بعد به لاکشمی در مورد درامد ناچیز خود خیانت میکند تا هرگز نتواند ان را ترک کند. زندگی لاکشمی تبدیل به کابوسی میشود که از ان نمیتواند فرار کند. با وجود این, او با سخنان مادرش زندگی میکند- تنها تحمل کردن, پیروز شدن است- و کم کم با دختران دیگر دوست میشود تا او را در این دنیای ترسناک و جدید زنده نگهدارد. پس اون روزی میرسه که اون باید تصمیم بگیره ایا اون همه چیز رو به خاطر فرصتی برای دوباره زنده شدنش به خطر میندازه؟ این رمان قدرتمند، که در قالب متن‌های زنده و پرماجرا توسط نویسنده کتاب من مالالا (Young Readers Edition) نوشته شده، دنیایی را به نمایش می‌گذارد که به اندازه واقعی غیر قابل تصور است و دختری که نه تنها زنده می‌ماند بلکه پیروز می‌شود.

نقد و بررسی

DOGO Books
edmodo-fka5cegxty - This book is AMAZING. Words cannot express how well the author did on writing this book. It is a very depressing story about a thirteen year old girl name Lakshmi, and her experience with the cruelty in this world. Lakshmi is a typical, poor hill girl. One day her step father decides to let her work as a maid in the city to earn money for the family. But when she visits the city, she finds out that she is not actually there to become a maid but something she never imagined doing in her lifetime. I must warn you this is a very depressing story as it progresses . It can be a lot for young readers to handle. But this book is a very inspiring and excellent book, I highly suggest this book to everyone.

Publisher's Weekly

Starred review from August 28, 2006
This hard-hitting novel told in spare free verse poems exposes the plight of a 13-year-old Nepali girl sold into sexual slavery. Through Lakshmi's innocent first-person narrative, McCormick (Cut
) reveals her gradual awakening to the harshness of the world around her. Even in their poverty-stricken rural home, Lakshmi finds pleasure in the beauty of the Himalayan mountains, the sight of Krishna, her betrothed, and the cucumbers she lovingly tends, then sells at market. After a monsoon wipes out their crops, her profligate stepfather sells Lakshmi to an "auntie" bound for the city. During her journey, the girl acquires a visual and verbal vocabulary of things she has never seen before: electric lights, a TV. Soon a hard-won sense of irony invades her narrative, too. Early on, a poem entitled "Everything I Need to Know" marks her step into womanhood (after her first menstrual cycle); later, "Everything I Need to Know Now" lists her rules as an initiated prostitute. In her village, Lakshmi had rebelliously purchased her first Coca-Cola for her mother, after her stepfather sold her; later, in Calcutta, she overhears two johns talking and realizes, "the price of a bottle of Coca-Cola at Bajai Sita's store./ That is what he paid for me." The author beautifully balances the harshness of brothel life with the poignant relationships among its residents; especially well-drawn characters include the son of one of the prostitutes, who teaches Lakshmi to read and speak some English and Hindi, and clever Monica, who earns her freedom but gets sent back by her shamed family. Readers will admire Lakshmi's grit and intelligence, and be grateful for a ray of hope for this memorable heroine at book's end. Ages 12-up.



School Library Journal

September 1, 2006
Gr 9 Up - -As this heartbreaking story opens, 13-year-old Lakshmi lives an ordinary life in Nepal, going to school and thinking of the boy she is to marry. Then her gambling-addicted stepfather sells her into prostitution in India. Refusing to -be with men, - she is beaten and starved until she gives in. Written in free verse, the girl -s first-person narration is horrifying and difficult to read. -In between, men come./They crush my bones with their weight./They split me open./Then they disappear. - -I hurt./I am torn and bleeding where the men have been. - The spare, unadorned text matches the barrenness of Lakshmi -s new life. She is told that if she works off her family -s debt, she can leave, but she soon discovers that this is virtually impossible. When a boy who runs errands for the girls and their clients begins to teach her to read, she feels a bit more alive, remembering what it feels like to be the -number one girl in class again. - When an American comes to the brothel to rescue girls, Lakshmi finally gets a sense of hope. An author -s note confirms what readers fear: thousands of girls, like Lakshmi in this story, are sold into prostitution each year. Part of McCormick -s research for this novel involved interviewing women in Nepal and India, and her depth of detail makes the characters believable and their misery palpable. This important book was written in their honor." -Alexa Sandmann, Kent State University, OH"

Copyright 2006 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.



Booklist

Starred review from September 15, 2006
Lakshmi, 13, knows nothing about the world beyond her village shack in the Himalayas of Nepal, and when her family loses the little it has in a monsoon, she grabs a chance to work as a maid in the city so she can send money back home. What she doesn't know is that her stepfather has sold her into prostitution. She ends up in a brothel far across the border in the slums of Calcutta, locked up, beaten, starved, drugged, raped, "torn and bleeding," until she submits. In beautiful clear prose and free verse that remains true to the child's viewpoint, first-person, present-tense vignettes fill in Lakshmi's story. The brutality and cruelty are ever present ("I have been beaten here, / locked away, / violated a hundred times / and a hundred times more"), but not sensationalized. An unexpected act of kindness is heartbreaking ("I do not know a word / big enough to hold my sadness"). One haunting chapter brings home the truth of "Two Worlds": the workers love watching " The Bold and the Beautiful\b \b0" on TV though in the real world, the world they know, a desperate prostitute may be approached to sell her own child. An unforgettable account of sexual slavery as it exists now. (Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2006, American Library Association.)




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