Showing posts with label murder. Show all posts
Showing posts with label murder. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

The Secret Fiend: The Boy Sherlock, His Fourth Case

by Shane Peacock. Tundra Books: 2010, 244 pages. ISBN 978-0887768538

Fourth book in an award-winning series for children and teens, The Secret Fiend finds a young Sherlock Holmes trying to not get involved in a case involving a young female admirer. This case revolves around attacks by a believed-to-be-fictional Spring Heeled Jack while paranoia and disorder begin to envelope the country as the Jewish Benjamin Disraeli becomes Prime Minister.

Full of historical detail and clues leading to wrong turns, this book will excite young and adult readers. Familiarity with the previous books is not necessary to enjoy The Secret Fiend, but many readers will no doubt seek out the others after finishing this tale.




Saturday, January 2, 2010

The Grounding of Group 6

by Julian F. Thompson, c. 1983. Young Adult (classic) literature.

Five high schoolers are sent to (what they think) is a boarding school to get them on the right track. All of them have committed some type of misbehavior that has lead their parents to send them away--but none of them would have suspected that they were meant to be poisoned and thrown into a deep crevasse! No one expected Group 6 and their (young) advisor to make it back from their orientation camping trip alive...

While this book will seem fairly dated for today's reader, it is a lot of fun to re-visit if you read this in the 80s as a kid or teen. This is also a chilling story about parents wanting to have their children eliminated which may be a nice companion to a book like Neal Shusterman's Unwind (however Shusterman's world is infinitely scarier). There is some appeal for male readers in The Grounding of Group 6 as much of the story is revealed from the teen boy characters including quite a few (tame) passages about their sexual experiences.

Sunday, November 15, 2009

Exposure

by Mal Peet. Candlewick Press, c. 2009, 430 pages.

This is a modern spin on the tragedy of Shakespeare’s Othello and set in South America. Otello is a black soccer star recently traded to the country’s racist south. He falls in love and marries quickly Desmerelda, the country’s striking white pop star (and daughter of a powerful and conservative politician). The glare of the paparazzi‘s cameras can be blinding and enemies can appear to be one’s confidantes and friends.

Young Adult fiction. The story is divided into five acts. Knowledge of Shakespeare’s Othello is not a necessity but allows for comparison of the texts and a contemporary examination of the original by younger readers. There is sympathy for Otello and for the life of a celebrity but this is not a celebrity-worship story. There is racism, poverty and murder. There is grittiness. There are distinct lines between wealth and poverty in this unnamed South American country and the distinction is a huge divide.

Recurring character of Paul Faustino (a sports writer) in two other Peet books.

Winner of 2009 Guardian Children’s Fiction Prize the only award judged by Children’s authors (http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/guardianchildrensfictionprize ) and A Junior Library Guild Selection (http://www.juniorlibraryguild.com/)

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

The Lovely Bones

Title: The Lovely Bones
Author: Alice Sebold
Publication Date: 2002
Number of Pages: 328
Genre: Fiction
Geographical Setting: suburban Pennsylvania (outside of Philadelphia)
Time period: 1970s
Series: N/A

Plot: Fourteen year old Susie is raped and murdered by a neighborhood man. From her heaven, she watches her family, friends, the community and her murderer throughout the years.

Subject Headings: murder, rape, crimes against teens, murder victim’s family, heaven

Appeal: Sebold’s heaven is one where wishes are granted, a personalized heaven that may be shared with others there when wants overlap—this is not a religious heaven. The description of the rape and murder is chilling but not salacious or exploitive. Family dynamics—mother/daughter, father/daughter, husband/wife, older sister/younger sister. Life of a mother who still desires her life as a woman first (her freedoms, her intellectual life). Families of murder victims and their lives after the event, the search for the killer, the search for closure.

If you liked The Lovely Bones, you might enjoy: Russell Banks’ The Sweet Hereafter. Anne Ursu’s Spilling Clarence. Laura Moriarty’s The Center of Everything.