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NAMES WILL NEVER HURT ME

On the first year anniversary of a shooting death at Rockville High, both the administration and the students are finding the day challenging. Except for the presence of a television crew, things—especially the bullying—are mostly normal for four students, the alternating narrators of events. Marvin, a.k.a. Floater, is the inside snitch, Kurt, a.k.a., Dirt is the consummate victim, Tisha is the half-white, half-black new girl looking for her place, and Ryan is the star quarterback. Each speak in realistic terms (including some cursing) about their day, including their own musings in such distinctive voices that identification by name gradually becomes unnecessary. Sometimes the ramblings are intense with cadence and delivery so clear that readers will be rapping along. At other times, the pain and hurt take poetic form on the page, slowing the eye. Each student’s character is challenged in the end, when the tensions and inevitable consequences erupt. Adoff’s keen ear overcomes an improbable plot in this outstanding first novel. (Fiction. YA)

Pub Date: April 1, 2004

ISBN: 0-525-47175-8

Page Count: 144

Publisher: Dutton

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 1, 2004

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EVERYTHING I PROMISED YOU

A poignant and romantic coming-of-age tale.

The boy she believed was the fated love of her life dies; now a 17-year-old girl must find a new future—and a new version of herself.

After the death of her boyfriend, Beck, and her military family’s latest move, Amelia Graham tries for a fresh start. On her first day at her new school, she nearly hits fellow senior Paloma with her car but ultimately finds a new friend in her. After months of being depressed and alone, Lia realizes she’s living again. And then there’s the boy. Although she feels an immediate connection, Lia stays away from him, trying to honor her love for Beck. But Isaiah is there when Lia needs support, and she’s increasingly drawn to him. As the past recedes, Lia realizes that who she was with Beck wasn’t all she’ll ever be. Told through Lia’s first-person point of view and moving between past and present, this story covers heartbreak, healing, and learning to live when the person you lived for is gone. Upperman’s writing is engaging, and although the emotions are heavy, an undercurrent of hope snakes through the narrative, growing brighter as Lia comes back to life and begins to see that the future holds multiple possibilities. Central characters present white; Paloma is cued Latine.

A poignant and romantic coming-of-age tale. (A Geographical History of Amelia Graham) (Romance. 14-18)

Pub Date: Feb. 4, 2025

ISBN: 9781464217784

Page Count: 384

Publisher: Sourcebooks Fire

Review Posted Online: Oct. 26, 2024

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Dec. 1, 2024

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THE ONLY GIRL IN TOWN

A high-concept premise that falls short in its execution.

A teenage girl finds herself alone after everyone else in her town mysteriously disappears, leaving her scrambling to figure out how to find them all.

One late summer day, everybody in July Fielding’s town disappears. She is left to piece together what happened, following a series of cryptic signs she finds around town urging her to “GET THEM BACK.” The narrative moves back and forth between July’s present and the events of the summer before, when her relationship with her best friend, cross-country team co-captain Sydney, starts to fracture due to a combination of jealousy over July’s new relationship with a cute boy called Sam and sweet up-and-coming freshman Ella’s threatening to overtake Syd’s status as star of the track team. The team members participate in a ritual in which they jump off a cliff into the rocky waters below at the end of their Friday practice runs. Though Ella is reluctant, Syd pressures her to jump. Short, frenetically paced sections move the story along quickly, and there is much foreshadowing pointing to something terrible that occurred at the end of that summer, which may be the key to July’s current predicament, but there is much misdirection too. Ultimately this is a story without enough setup to make the turn the book takes in the end feel fully developed or earned. All characters read white.

A high-concept premise that falls short in its execution. (Fiction. 14-18)

Pub Date: Sept. 19, 2023

ISBN: 9780593327173

Page Count: 320

Publisher: Dutton

Review Posted Online: July 27, 2023

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 1, 2023

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