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Cinnamon Roll Murder (Hannah Swensen, #15)
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The Fresh Baked Usa Today, San Francisco Chronicle And Chicago Tribune Bestseller! April is a...
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It from the pit
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The object of the game is to land on the treasure chest, but don't get grabbed by It From The Pit. A...
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The Grizzled
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he Grizzled is a cooperative game about survival in the trenches during the first World War where...
Pocket Civ
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From the designer's website: "A Solitaire Civilization game that's compact enough to play on a...
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After the Scrum
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When a former rugby player reinventing himself meets a man who’s afraid to move on, can love offer...
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Selfish Space edition
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Only one astronaut can get home on the remaining oxygen supplies and you must battle against...
One Vegas Night (Puckboy)
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5-Minute Marvel
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The Marvel version of the chaotically fast-paced cooperative card game 5-Minute Dungeon that lets a...
Kristy H (1252 KP) rated The Most Dangerous Place on Earth in Books
Feb 13, 2018
I'd heard a lot of advance praise for this novel, and had put it on hold at my local library ages ago. I was excited to finally get a chance to read it, but upon finishing it, was left feeling conflicted. This is going to be yet another one of those lauded novels that everyone loves where I feel a bit "eh." Don't get me wrong: this is a well-written book--even a beautiful one at times--and it often tells a compelling and sometimes frightening story of kids growing up in suburbia. The novel starts with the gang in eighth grade and goes through their senior year. It's told in snippets from various students, as well as Miss Nicoll.
The problem, for me, is that it read more like a series of interconnected short stories than a novel. We get brief insights into a variety of students, but no real depth or insight into anyone. You're able to infer a lot about each and how their home life and past has affected them, but every student's piece leaves you wanting more, feeling unfinished. Even Miss Nicoll's role sort of trails off. It's a shame, because most of the teens are so clearly written that you can visualize them so well - they each stand out on the page, and each one could have commanded the book on their own. Instead, they come and go, and at times, the plot veers off into strange side stories that seem unnecessary or unbelievable.
This is one of those novels that terrifies me to have my children grow up, because it presents high school as one never-ending saga of bullying and partying. The rich, disaffected teens are abandoned by their similarly rich and disaffected parents and no one really seems to care about anything. Still, you find yourself getting into one kids' story, only to have the point of view turn and you're thrust into another student's life instead. By the end, I found myself frustrated, wanting to know more, and wishing for more finality to, well, everything. 3.5 stars
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