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Laddar... Living on Impulseav Cara Haycak
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Getting caught shoplifting leads fifteen-year-old Mia to a greater understanding of herself, sympathy for her unmarried mother, and a job in a college laboratory which not only pleases her ailing scientist grandfather, but lets her glimpse a possible future brighter than any she had imagined. Inga biblioteksbeskrivningar kunde hittas. |
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Google Books — Laddar... GenrerMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.6Literature English (North America) American fiction 21st CenturyKlassifikation enligt LCBetygMedelbetyg:
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finally drafted my review. This isn't final, mostly because finding a polite way to say "blaaaaaaaaaaaaah" is hard to do.
Mia thinks her life is hitting bottom when she gets busted for shoplifting, but it’s about to get much worse: her two best friends announce that they’re tired of dealing with her and don’t want to be her friends anymore. Her grandfather--the person she’s closest to in the world--is in poor health. And to pay the cost of the shoes she stole from the department store, Mia has to find herself a job--and the one she finds involves feeding flies and monitoring their breeding habits.
Her new employment provides a bit of discipline, giving Mia a stable environment to learn to control her impulses. Not that she reins them in completely--she still flirts with college boys she knows she shouldn’t date, and eventually gets herself fired for freeing the flies she’s found beauty in--but she’s trying. While Mia never really gets her impulses totally under control, she does come to terms with her life and the people in it, and how she can better react to and deal with them.
The book has some positive messages and a reasonably-likeable narrator, but it never leaps off the page. Mia’s ups and downs all happen in quick succession chronologically, but the story still limps along without a compelling hook. Both the plot and character arcs are predictable and steady. Teens may pick this up, but are not likely to be compelled to finish.
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