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Chargement... Bright Burning Stars (édition 2019)par A.K. Small
Information sur l'oeuvreBright Burning Stars par A. K. Small
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Inscrivez-vous à LibraryThing pour découvrir si vous aimerez ce livre Actuellement, il n'y a pas de discussions au sujet de ce livre. On one hand, this was a good, well-written book about two teenagers studying ballet. On the other hand, maybe I'm more of a well-adjusted adult than I realized, because an environment in which girls starve themselves into eating disorders, drug themselves to perform better, and relationships are determined by who dances bests strikes me as unhealthy and toxic. I realize this is also a book about mental illness and that the two narrators are likely not perceiving everything quite right, but I kept wondering why the adults were encouraging these actions and not stepping in to put a stop to some of these behaviors. To be fair, there also wouldn't be much of a plot if that happened. Overall, a good read, just know what you're getting into. I fell in love with this cover and was eager to read this book. I love books with dance in them and thought this would offer a good glimpse into the competitiveness of ballet. However, I have never been a fan of toxic female relationships; there are few books I've read where I thought that was done successfully. Unfortunately, there was a lot of problematic issues that stemmed from Marine and Kate's friendship and not all were handled well. Bright Burning Stars touches on ballet culture, eating disorders, abortion, and toxic relationships (both friendship and romantic). It was a lot of serious topics, probably too many to tackle in one book, and I wasn't a fan of how many were handled. I wish they would have been explored in more detail and fleshed out better. I received an advanced copy from Algonquin Young Readers in return for an honest review. I wanted to like this book but I found myself losing myself within the pages of it and not in a good way. The book started out good. In fact, I stuck with it for about the first several chapters but than the winds shifted and my interest changed. There was nothing interesting about the characters In addition, the story seemed to stall and move really slowly. The style of this book to me came off as juvenile. This may because the book is written for the young adult. After getting half way into the book, I put it down. I could not even tell you what happened previously as I fell asleep and there was nothing memorable about what I read. aucune critique | ajouter une critique
Romance.
Young Adult Fiction.
Young Adult Literature.
HTML:READ THE NOVEL THAT INSPIRED THE FILM BIRDS OF PARADISE, STARRING KRISTINE FROSETH AND DIANA SILVERS. ??A compulsively readable story. I was breathless and battling tears up until the very last stunning turns onstage and beyond. A dazzling, heart-wrenching debut.? ??Nova Ren Suma, #1 New York Times bestselling author of The Walls Around Us Would you die for the Prize? Best friends Marine Duval and Kate Sanders have trained since childhood at the Paris Opera Ballet School, where they??ve forged an inseparable bond through shared stories of family tragedies and a powerful love for dance. When the body of a student is found in the dorms just before the start of their final year, Marine and Kate begin to ask themselves how far they would go for the ultimate prize: to be named the one girl who will join the Opera??s prestigious corps de ballet. Would they cheat? Seduce the most talented boy in the school, dubbed the Demigod, hoping his magic will make them shine, too? Would they risk death for it? Neither girl is sure. But then Kate gets closer to the Demigod, even as Marine has begun to capture his heart. And as selection day draws near, the competition??for the Prize, for the Demigod??becomes fiercer, and Marine and Kate realize they have everything to lose, including each other. Bright Burning Stars is a stunning, propulsive story about girls at their physical and emotional extremes, the gutting power of first love, and what it means to fight for your Aucune description trouvée dans une bibliothèque |
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Google Books — Chargement... GenresClassification décimale de Melvil (CDD)813.6Literature English (North America) American fiction 21st CenturyClassification de la Bibliothèque du CongrèsÉvaluationMoyenne:
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TW: Pedophilic overtones in this book
This book needs a pedophilic overtones warning. The author doesn't know how to write teenagers, so we wind up with a five-year-old in a sixteen-year-old's body who's very excited to lose her virginity to a fellow teenager. Tell me handing someone a red paper heart isn't something solidly associated with children. Her friend has at most the emotional state of a thirteen-year-old, but the author insists she, too, is sixteen. My skin crawled so much I'm surprised it didn't burst open. Will someone please tell me how sleeping with another student is supposed to make you a better dancer? There's also a pregnancy leading to abortion subplot in this book. There's definitely books to address that, but 'teens in ballet school' books aren't that place unless there's a -lot- of groundwork laid to pull that off. That is not what happened here, and the writing was super clumsy.
The book jacket points out that drugs will be mentioned, and they barely are. The book jacket also indicates eating disorders and suicide. The eating disorder happens for all of twenty pages. This is about teens in ballet! Eating disorders are a perfect topic to examine at length and in detail. For two teens who are so good at ballet that they travel abroad to Paris, there is no sense of skill or adoration of ballet because the writing is so bland. There is no sense of competition between the two, only cheap insults about other girls. I can't imagine how these protagonists got here. Why would such a prestigious school let in a five-year-old and a thirteen-year-old? They are emotionally unable to handle the challenges that come with this. And yet, the book keeps making them top-of-the-list dancers. They never stop whining. Scare me, damn it. This was supposed to be a horror-inspired novel!
The suicide attempt happens in the last eight pages of the novel because the pacing in this book is awful. The suicide attempt is resolved in three pages. There is no depression, no buildup, nothing besides "I didn't make it! Let me be melodramatic!" I wanted to feel emotion and worry about suicidal teenagers, not listen to crying toddlers or be inside the minds of tweens drooling at the thought of overly-romantic sex.
This book was disgusting. Don't waste your time--just watch the Natalie Portman movie instead. ( )