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Loading... Of a Boy (2002)by Sonya Hartnett
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. This book was rather dark and depressing. Within the first few chapters, three children go missing, a young boy lists the things he finds frightening (including sea monsters, getting lost in grows, being forgotten at school, and spontaneous combustion), a young man dies in a car crashed by his best friend, and a father dies of cancer. The book is powerfully written — you get a strong impression of who Adrian is and what concerns him day by day — but the conclusion is dark and dreary. I’m not sure that it would really be a good recommendation for younger teens. ( ) How can I rate this? Beautifully written, pitch perfect, subtly wreaks havoc on a sensitive reader's soul. But not actually enjoyable. No HEA. No 'comic relief.' Not bleak, not graphic, but still not for the easily traumatized. Some children need someone like Hartnett to be honest with them, because they know that life is hard and don't like the sugar-coated books that dominate library shelves. Some children (and adults) can't really be expected to be able to handle this. I'll be thinking about it much longer than I'll want to be. The copy I have is titled Of A Boy and I am still haunted by this book. Sonya Hartnett is masterful with words and there are so many quotes that will stay with me, somehow the author puts a few words together and they then create this physical reaction when you read them - amazing. It touches on many raw nerves as a parent and many memories as a child. Three children are abducted at the start of the novel. Adrian (9 years old) lives with his Grandmother and Uncle. He is convinced that the new family across the street are the abducted children. Adrian has no friends at school and is worried about everything, especially losing the people closest to him. He befriends the new kids. Eventually they run away as Adrian thinks he is going to be put into a children’s home. They go searching for the lost children in the local swimming centre which is closed for the winter. They walk on top of the swimming pool cover, which rips apart. They fall into the pool and drown. Easy to read, only short. Beautifully written, very sensitive. The reader gets a real insight into the worries and life of a young boy who fears abandonment and is often bullied. Shocking ending. no reviews | add a review
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While the residents of his town concern themselves with the disappearance of three children, a lonely, rejected nine-year-old boy worries that he may inherit his mother's insanity. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813Literature American literature in English American fiction in EnglishLC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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