List Epithetical Books Yearbook (Yearbook Trilogy #1)
Title | : | Yearbook (Yearbook Trilogy #1) |
Author | : | Ally Condie |
Book Format | : | Paperback |
Book Edition | : | Special Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 231 pages |
Published | : | September 15th 2006 by Shadow Mountain |
Categories | : | Young Adult. Lds. Lds Fiction. Christianity. Fiction. Contemporary |
Ally Condie
Paperback | Pages: 231 pages Rating: 3.83 | 1335 Users | 184 Reviews
Rendition As Books Yearbook (Yearbook Trilogy #1)
It was the first day of school at Lakeview High, and everyone was afraid of something. Michaela Choi was afraid that Ethan Back was never going to ask her out on a date. Andrea Beck was afraid that someone would find her weak spot, the chink in her armor. She was afraid of knowing what it was herself. Principal Downing was afraid she was going to die. Julie Reid was afraid that no one would notice her. She was also afraid that someone would. And there was a deeper, unnamed fear inside her that she couldn't escape - a fear that she was nothing and no one . . . Yearbook is a captivating story about relationships and heartaches and fears and ideas and doubts and testimonies and everything that a teenage mind and a backpack can contain. But most important, Yearbook is a novel about how everyone has something to offer and something to learn.Details Books Conducive To Yearbook (Yearbook Trilogy #1)
Original Title: | Yearbook |
ISBN: | 1590386906 (ISBN13: 9781590386903) |
Edition Language: | English |
Series: | Yearbook Trilogy #1 |
Rating Epithetical Books Yearbook (Yearbook Trilogy #1)
Ratings: 3.83 From 1335 Users | 184 ReviewsDiscuss Epithetical Books Yearbook (Yearbook Trilogy #1)
3 1/2 starst was the first day of school at Lakeview High, and everyone was afraid of something. Michaela Choi was afraid that Ethan Back was never going to ask her out on a date. Andrea Beck was afraid that someone would find her weak spot, the chink in her armor. She was afraid of knowing what it was herself. Principal Downing was afraid she was going to die. Julie Reid was afraid that no one would notice her. She was also afraid that someone would. And there was a deeper, unnamed fear insideThis book was one of the sweetest books I have read. Considering this is one of Condie's first novels, it is truly brilliant and insightful. I particularly enjoyed that this book was set in my area- something I hadn't realized until I started the story. It also spoke to me because I am a yearbook editor and have many friends of the Mormon religion even though I am not. I could relate to so many characters in this book, as well as locations that it felt like it had been made just for me. It had
I wanted to like this book more, because my daughters enjoyed it so much. but it really wasn't great writing. Most of the male characters were basically the same- sincere, goofy, open (Which personally, I find rare with male teenagers), and sporty. But it was clean and had some interesting developments. It was a little too perfect and preachy to me, but I'm glad books like this exist- better to have good morals and sub-standard writing than bad ones with a higher quality storytelling.
3.5 Stars I actually really enjoyed this book. It was a realistic, easy-read that contained so many great messages.I loved reading the different points of view of everyone and seeing how they all connected. However, the big time gaps and the tell-not-show style prohibited it from flowing as well as it could have.The story itself didn't have a lot of "oomph", as you could say, but the themes of the novel make up for it. I bumped up my rating from 3 to 3.5 stars solely because of the last chapter
An interesting mix. One one hand, the story was okay, the format interesting even if it did make me feel as if I was being robbed of a lot of potential plot, the chracters varied form the very good and true to life to the average teenage saint, the pacing was even good. The narrative was strong, particularly for the better developed characters. One the other hand, the dialogue was horrendous. It was sooo FAKE. No one talks like that, especially not teenagers. These two 17 year old were havign
I find the book yearbook by Allyson condie to be very good at getting the story through the small tiny brain of mine in so many different stories, however there were areas in which the book was not quite as good at drama and suspence. The book was set from Seattle in modern time and was made for Mormon young adults. It was very interesting to have 22 chapters and have different people narrate them the whole time and for chapter 23 to just be yearbook entries for all of the narrators of the book.
This one was better than some of the recent LDS fiction I've read, but I'm getting a little discouraged by the general literary quality of LDS fiction. There's a lot of telling and not so much showing, lots of feeling like the books have to involve major conversions and not so much regular life of an LDS person or community. Lots of didacticism, lots of scenes showing them sharing scriptures with each other, which is kind of nice, but the whole of those scenes doesn't add to the plot,
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