Retrato do autor

Lorri Hewett

Autor(a) de Dancer

4 Works 169 Membros 2 Críticas

Obras por Lorri Hewett

Dancer (1999) 94 exemplares
Lives of Our Own (1600) 30 exemplares
Coming of Age (1991) 25 exemplares
Soulfire (1832) 20 exemplares

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Sexo
female

Membros

Críticas

Ballet has always had a special place in my heart. I took ballet classes for two years, from seven to nine years old, and I loved it. Grand jeté was my favorite move. My earliest memories of ballet were the Alvin Ailey Dancers and numerous Russian ballerinas. This story really brought me a sense of nostalgia.

Story:

"I didn't finish the thought. Instead, I imagined us dancing together, his walking around me in a slow promenade, looking into my eyes" (pg 94)

In Dancer by Lori Hewitt (214 pages), Stephanie had been passed up for the role of a lifetime, to be Princess Aurora (Sleeping Beauty) in a ballet play. She starts contemplating the many difficulties in ballet and begins to doubt herself. Not to mention her parents don't think she will have any longevity as a ballerina, a black ballerina at that. Stephanie gets tired being the only one who believes she can accomplish her dream until she meets the lustrous Miss Winnie, a woman who embodies all the ballerina Stephanie wants to be.

I really want to give a handclap to Hewitt for including beautiful female friendships. She realistically shows the pettiness, insecurity, and loving nature girls can have toward one another.

Dancer had some authentically realistic moments. One scene, in particular, left me with a great quote:

"Maybe I could be her friend, but I couldn't help her solve her problems" (pg 205)

I enjoyed the tinge of romance as well though I wanted just a glass more.

CHARACTERS:

I like Stephanie because she's relatable. She is insecure about her talent, her future, and even a little bit about herself. Stephanie even acknowledges that she has an inner ugly voice that thinks rude things. The situation she had with the three private school girls, Lisa, Kelly, and Gillian, is all too real.

"On Saturday night, when Lisa was out with her boyfriend and I was supposedly having a slumber party, I sat at home sewing ribbons on a new pair of pointe shoes and was in bed by ten o'clock" (pg 38)

Most people know that feeling when you agree or get involve in something you had no plans in due to pressure, not even from wanting to fit in but just not to say the wrong thing.

Vance is cool. He reminds me Monty, from my favorite book Standing Against the Wind, but a lot rougher around the edges. He's more than what meets the eye and he is very conceited but sweet. I wish he spoke his feelings more in the book because I wanted to know what he was thinking.

The mentor character is one that I have always liked, so Miss Winnie was great in my opinion. The descriptions of her outfits seemed so pretty too.

Also, I sympathize with Anna. She simply just did her job well. It was not like she was trying to be the teacher's pet.

The character development with Gillian was a nice one. It's nice that Lisa and Kelly were not shoehorned into to flat mean girls roles as well.

OVERALL:

I was deeply engrossed in this book and its characters, so five out of five stars from me. I am not sure if this is a book you read once and it stays with you, or a book you read over and over. Either way, it's a book you have to read.

I might have to add this one to my bookshelf.
… (mais)
 
Assinalado
DestDest | Oct 11, 2018 |
I really liked this book. It’s about these African American youths who have a hard time in the hood. The main characters brother is a gang banger and is against his little brothers best friend’s gang. So these youths live in a violent neighborhood.
 
Assinalado
nm.fall07.a.lopez | Nov 6, 2007 |

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Estatísticas

Obras
4
Membros
169
Popularidade
#126,057
Avaliação
3.9
Críticas
2
ISBN
16
Línguas
1

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