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Speak

Speak

List Price: $22.00
Your Price: $14.96
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Speak your mind!
Review: Speak is a deep and stark look into the world of freshman Melinda Sordino. Melinda is hated and shunned by her entire school including her former friends for breaking up an end of the summer pool party by calling the cops. But no one knows the real reason Melinda called the cops...that night she was raped by a drunk senior named Andy Evans. But Melinda goes on being silent because she knows no one will believe her. The only outlet she seems to have is her art class with her very cool teacher. But Melinda can't hold on to this secret forever especially when Andy comes back for more and then Melinda decides she must do the one thing she hasn't done yet...SPEAK.

This was one of the best books I have ever read. Melinda was so REAL. A wonderful book for teen girls that follows one's journey through her freshman year dealing with the burden of her rape. Woo. Read this!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Great for Troubled Teens
Review: Poor Melinda! Can things get any worse for her? It's the beginning of her freshman year and she's a complete social pariah. No one will speak to her, not even her oldest friends. Melinda spends most of her freshman year outcast from even the most unwanted groups. She hides a secret, afraid to admit it to anyone, including herself.

I have to admit, I found the first half of this novel to be pretty slow. I spent most of the time thinking to myself, "Just get over it and go on!" By the time Melinda finally admits her secret to the reader and to herself, I had figured out her secret. Since I've never been in a situation like her's, I can't imagine what it would be like. However, after reading some of the "crazy" thoughts that went on in her head, I can sympathize with what a young girl like Melinda must be going through. I think it has also given me some insight into what other girls that age might be going through their freshman year.

I liked the way Anderson labled the transitions/chapters according to the way Melinda saw things. I also loved the way she characterized Melinda's teachers by giving them nicknames to fit the way she saw them. I often wonder if my students do that, too.

I would recommend this book for girls who seem to be having a problem fitting in. On the other hand, it might be good for girls who fit in well and need to see the "other side of the coin" for a change.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: A good book for teens and a good book for parents of teens
Review: I think this is a good book for teenagers to read. Those who consider themselves on the outside looking in could relate well to the main character, Melinda. I think teens could learn several lessons from this story, especially about drinking and putting yourself in the wrong place at the wrong time. Teenagers' minds are very complex and this story did a fairly good job of conveying that to the reader. I do think that it was unrealistic in that a teenage girl would wait that long to tell someone. Overall I would recommend the book to young adults and parents of young adults who would like to better understand teenage culture.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Speak: The Best Book I Have Ever Read
Review: This book is written extremely well. Anderson captures the harsh community of a High School. This book has great examples of what it is like to be a troubled teen in High School struggling to get along with other teens in her grade. Melinda has a sarcastic,honest, and sweet attitude that makes her who she is. This book is the best book for teens that are trying to get along with his or her peers.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Speak by Laurie Halse Anderson
Review: Speak is one of the best young adult novels I have read in a long time! This book centers around the inner struggles of a young freshman named Melinda who once was in the popular crowd in the eighth grade but now finds herself the social outcast because she called the police at a party held right before school starts. All of her friends hate her because they think she wanted to get everyone at the party in trouble for drinking. What they don't know is that Melinda was raped by a senior named Andy at the party, and in her drunken state, she called the police because she didn't know what else to do. Melinda begins high school with no friends and does not tell anyone, including her parents, about the horrible thing that happened to her. All of the inner pain she feels manifests itself in her inability to talk much at school, and in her avoidance of people all together. She spends much of her freshman year shut up in a janitor's closet until another traumatic event forces Melinda to face what happened to her and finally get her voice back. The reader has to slowly find out what really happened to Melinda as the events do not unfold all at once. Instead, one has to go inside her mind and experience the same pain and lonliness she does as she tries to deal with what has happened to her. I would highly recommend this book to any young adult. It poignantly describes the struggles that a person who experiences a traumatic event goes through, and teaches a good lesson about sharing your feelings with others instead of holding everything inside.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Speak--A High School Journey
Review: Speak is a gripping novel about a young girl's (Melinda's) horrific experience and her first year of high school. Melinda's sarcastic sense of humor about typical high school happenings is hilarious at times. From an educator's viewpoint, this book gives lots of advice of what not to do when teaching, with a little bit of humanity thrown in through the character of Mr. Freeman, art teacher. From the beginning of the book, Melinda is not speaking much at all. She is an outcast among the cliques at school and at home. As one progresses through her grading periods and life, we realize that something terrible must have happened at an end-of-summer party that Melinda attended. When IT, the reason and source of her pain, appears at school, Melinda's fear and lip-biting overwhelm her. She must learn to deal with her insecurities and fear alone.

I highly recommend this book to any young adult. I felt a connection somehow at the beginning of this novel to the feelings of insecurity and not fitting in during high school that Melinda expressed. I also really enjoyed reading her thoughts about some of the lame assignments given during this time. Melinda's journey to conquering her fear and beginning to heal took time as I believe it would need to in reality. By the end of this novel, I was ready to stand up and cheer for Melinda. This realistic novel was well-written, with short "chapters" that make one not want to put it down. I think it is one of the best literature works I've read this year.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Speak
Review: This book "speaks" volumes about teenagers today. I feel that every parent of an eighth grade girl going into high school or with a daughter in high school should read this book. I am an educator, and now have a whole new outlook on my students after reading this fictional story with real life abilities.
To begin, Melinda Sordino is enduring her first day at high school. Instead of being excited she is upset for reasons later revealed to the reader. Throughout the book, the reader is able to see the cruelty students endure from their peers. Also, because of the inner thoughts of Melinda, we are able to read the feelings of an outcast child. The reader feels the shame of the main character and smiles at her witty statements. You will cry and laugh at the same time as you go with Melinda throughout her first year of high school. But like most kids, Melinda has a secret, unlike others, the secret is shocking and unsettling. I encourage you to see life through the eyes of a normal teenager who is forced to deal with cruel classmates, busy parents, and a haunting experience. Read Speak. If you are a student or a parent you will discover the common, and not so common, issues of a thirteen year old girl in an American city.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Emotions run deep
Review: The reason I love this book so much is because I can relate to so many of the things she does and why(crawling in bed and never wanting to leave, skipping school not because wants to be a rebel, she just needs to get away etc.). Words cannot express the feeling. But the end reminds me that every situation has hope and that it's never too late to fix something. I guess what I'm trying to say is the book is inspirering.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Excellent book!
Review: I highly recommend this novel! It addresses the issue of teen rape and the aftermath of such a tragedy. In the book the main character, Melinda, has has suppressed the memory of the previous summer and her rape at the hands of a popular upperclassman. She alienated all of her friends, and the rest of the school, by calling the police to the party where she was raped. As a result of her injuries, she experiences a sense of removal from what she is experience, sort of a disassociative disorder, and she finds it hard to speak. Her difficulties in the following school year are humorous, yet poignant. She finally becomes empowered through a cathartic art project and strikes back at her rapist, saving her self-esteem and endearing herself to others. Great book for teen girls, who might empathize, and teen boys, who need to know the other side of the issue.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Whine-A-Thon
Review: Sheesh! I think a book about a girl who was horribly date raped and took a year to get the nerve to talk about it could have been made exciting and dramatic. Instead we get this horribly self obsessed chick whining and moaning and carrying on about this and that and t'other for chapters. Bored me stiff. I guess I'm just a little tired of "spoiled teenage whining" books after adopted two children from China and seeing teenagers their age begging in the streets for food, but anyway.


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