|
Loading...
Recomendações do LibraryThingRecomendações de membrosNenhuma. A carregar...
não
provavelmente não
provavelmente sim
sim
adorará Adira ao LibraryThing para descobrir se gostará deste livro. The sequel is quite touching. While the Geograhy Club was good, this one shined. The story of the rainbow crow and how it tied into the children was precious. ( )I don't have a lot to say about this book. It's a very cute read, short, sweet and not-quite to the point (which is the point, amusingly enough). Hartinger's sequel to Geography Club is the story of Russel, Gunnar and Min. It follows the three friends as they embark on one of those life-changing (or at least temporarily altering) events that teenagers have. They decide to spend the summer being camp counselors at summer camp. What ensues does include some hijinks, but like the first book, there's a serious side. Hartinger tells the story from Russel's point of view, infusing it with a mild form of introspection that is both amusing and annoying -- though not enough so that I didn't like the book. In fact, I enjoyed the story because it was exactly what I wanted -- a cute story that you knew would be happy in the end, but you weren't sure just how the characters were going to sort things out. I wish Hartinger was going to write more in this universe, but The Order of the Poison Oak seems to be a complete novel. It's both enjoyable and fun to read. A sequel to Geography Club. Russel is looking forward to the end of the school year and a summer where he can go away and not be known as "the gay boy." He goes to be a camp counselor with his two best friends. Russel hadn't really thought about what it was going to be like to be in charge of a group of 10-year-old boys, let alone his first group who are all burn survivors. Russel's narrative is honest and funny at times. He struggles with issues most teens face and tries his best - not always making the best choices, but always with the best intentions. I like this series by Hartinger. His works are quick read and easily accessible, with good messages about accepting people as they are and where to find true friends. Like the first book, I raced through this without stopping to breath. Again, I was eager to find out what would happen to the three main characters. I didn't enjoy this quite as much as the first, as i felt the winning over of the kids was a little bit contrived, and my cornball alarms went off a few times. The scenario where two friends are lusting after the same stranger was a flashback to teen awkward. Hartinger not only believably details the experience of being a gay teen, he effectively describes the experience of any sort of outsider. Some of the more frank sexual details may cause some tittering among readers, but the characters are believable and sympathetic. The great YA melodrama trap rears its head here, but Hartinger handles the drama well, and the action does not come across as arbitrary. Female teens may enjoy this more than gay male teens because of the romantic twists. sem resenhas | adicionar uma resenha
Referências a esta obra em recursos externos.
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Descrição do livro |
|
Summer camp is different from high school. Something about spending the night.
Things happen.
Geography Club's Russel Middlebrook is back, and he and his friends are off to work as counselors at a summer camp. Brent Hartinger's third novel is the story of Indian legends, skinny-dipping in moonlit coves, and passionate summer romance. It's also the story of Russel's latest club, the Order of the Poison Oak, a secret society dedicated to helping its members see life's hidden beauty and accept its sometimes painful sting.
(retirado da Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:01 -0400)
A primeira ronda de testes foi já encerrada. Visite o grupo Open Shelves Classification para mais informação.
Ligações Rápidas |
| eLivros | Áudio | Troca |
| — | — | 2/17 |