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Alison, Who Went Away

Alison, Who Went Away

List Price: $15.00
Your Price: $10.20
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Montavius from Richview Middle School
Review: I often get YA books to review, but I usually glance and put them aside. This one caught me and I started reading. Couldn't stop until I'd finished. What a charming writer! Seems to me a likely successor to Judy Blume and Robert Cormier. This fast novel has all the elements of modern life's challenges (a distant gay dad, a lukewarmly welcomed but pretty decent stepdad, misbehaving hair that ruins more than a day, glasses you try to take off whenever dreamboat is around, an almost too-protective mom, and a sister who did everything beautifully, or did she?). It's the humorous tone that attracted me, but the sharp psychological insights are everywhere too. The suspense about missing Alison is relatively low-key, but manacingly present throughout. The ending worked perfectly, in the context of the protagonist's philosophy of life, which includes both randomness and acceptance.

As a writing instructor (online mainly), I'm going to be recommending this one for all YA writers to take notes from.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Voice of a delightfully wry teen facing ordinary modern life
Review: I often get YA books to review, but I usually glance and put them aside. This one caught me and I started reading. Couldn't stop until I'd finished. What a charming writer! Seems to me a likely successor to Judy Blume and Robert Cormier. This fast novel has all the elements of modern life's challenges (a distant gay dad, a lukewarmly welcomed but pretty decent stepdad, misbehaving hair that ruins more than a day, glasses you try to take off whenever dreamboat is around, an almost too-protective mom, and a sister who did everything beautifully, or did she?). It's the humorous tone that attracted me, but the sharp psychological insights are everywhere too. The suspense about missing Alison is relatively low-key, but manacingly present throughout. The ending worked perfectly, in the context of the protagonist's philosophy of life, which includes both randomness and acceptance.

As a writing instructor (online mainly), I'm going to be recommending this one for all YA writers to take notes from.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Montavius from Richview Middle School
Review: My book report was about this girl named Alison who hated her mother and had a gay dad and a okay stepdad . She also had a sister who had a friend who had an idea that could make things a disaster . Her horrible idea was if they signed up for the school play maybe they could end up with dates for the freshman dance,but things had been a disaster for her since her big sister Alison had left .Susan thought that doing this would make her look cool or as kids say "popular",and that is exactly what Susan wanted to be . Susan thinks that everything she tries to do leads to a big problem .


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