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Chris Vick

Autore di Girl. Boy. Sea.

8 opere 50 membri 3 recensioni

Opere di Chris Vick

Girl. Boy. Sea. (2019) 28 copie
Kook (2016) 5 copie
Storms (2017) 5 copie
Kook (2016) 3 copie
The last whale (2022) 3 copie
The Last Whale (2023) 2 copie
Door de storm (2017) 1 copia

Etichette

Informazioni generali

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Utenti

Recensioni

There was something quite wonderful and magical about this. A story of a new friendship through adversity, hope, acceptance, and a need to survive. It’s part reality, part mythical. The mythical element of this story really added to its strength, and provided opportunity to include more difficult messages and themes in a way suitable for younger readers.

A powerful story and one I wish was around when I was younger. I remember reading books together as class when I was younger, and I hope this becomes one of those books. Suitable for middle-graders but there is definitely something for the older reader as well.

Thank you NetGalley and the publisher for a copy of this, in exchange for an honest review.
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
SophieLJanssen | 1 altra recensione | Apr 18, 2020 |
Fifteen-year-old Bill is with a group of young boys and their captain on a yacht when a storm appears seemingly from nowhere. The others manage to get off the boat but Bill turns back to get supplies. Before he has finished, the storm has blown the life raft away and the yacht is quickly taking on water. Bill is forced to cast off alone in a small wooden boat into the raging storm. He survives the storm - a small miracle in itself - but he has no way of knowing where he is and if he has enough provisions to last until he is found or if he will be found. But fate has another miracle in store for him - he spots what he first thinks is the dead body of a young girl draped over a barrel. When she opens her eyes, he knows he has to rescue her even though he knows this means even less chance of survival. But, together, Bill, the young British boy and Aya, a young Berber girl may just be able to beat the odds.

Girl. Boy. Sea. by author Chris Vick is a YA adventure story that will appeal to both young boys and girls and one that adults can also enjoy with plenty of action to keep the reader glued to the page. It is also the story of how the human spirit, faced with seemingly insurmountable odd, can overcome if they ignore differences like birth place and gender and work together, an important lesson right now. It also shows the importance of storytelling in helping us to overcome our differences. I thoroughly enjoyed Girl. Boy. Sea. and would recommend it to anyone who enjoys a well-written YA adventure.

Thanks to Netgalley and Zephyr for the opportunity to read this book in exchange for an honest review
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
lostinalibrary | 1 altra recensione | Apr 17, 2020 |
4.5 stars
I received a review copy from Maximum Pop! Books, but this does not affect my rating or opinions!

KOOK is a coming of age story like no other. Sam, brainy and pale, moves to Cornwall with his mother and half-sister from London, where he meets the beautiful force that is Jade. Jade introduces him to the ocean and her surfer friends, and the trouble starts from day one. Sam is drawn to the same waters that claimed his father ten years before, and they might just get him, too.

This book had me so fuming mad that I couldn’t read it in one sitting. (I did read it in less than two days, though.) It was frustrating to watch these teenagers do things I just knew would go south. I had to take breaks because of their recklessness. I was worried I wouldn’t be able to finish the book, but like a wave, it pushed me away just before it dragged me back in. I wanted to walk away, but it was like being in a car with a bunch of teenagers, watching as they drove towards a red light, screaming at the driver to pay attention, knowing that you were all about to hit a truck… Disaster was inevitable.

But here’s the thing, and it took me until about 75% of the book to figure it out. In real life, you don’t like everyone you meet. You don’t understand everything people do. You don’t agree with their actions. Vick didn’t set out to write a book about characters you love or root for; I imagine he wanted to write real people into existence, and he did. I didn’t like Jade a lot of the time, but there were parts of her that I loved and respected. Rag did things that I hated, but he wasn’t a bad person. Even G had redeeming qualities. Sometimes I liked the characters, sometimes I wanted them to stop being idiots (actually, most of the time), but I couldn’t help but root for them. There was a part of me that wanted to be there, with them in their moments of excitement, even when the rational part of me was shaking her head at their stupidity.

Only once I’d reached the end, tissues strewn all around, did I fully appreciate what Vicks had done. There was no other way for the book to end and be as incredibly real as it was. He’d written a masterpiece of a love story – with a girl and with the ocean, neither of which could be tamed. He’d put me inside the mind of a skinny, nerdy, teenage boy as he went through a rite of passage into a hardened, scary adulthood, where things don’t always work out and parents are humans who don’t know what to do.

If you liked Skins (and I mean, the good, old British Skins), then you’ll enjoy KOOK. You don’t even need to know much about surfing – enough is explained in the book to keep you floating along…and maybe even want to try it yourself. (But know that there is only one teacher.)

Honestly, be prepared to slam the book on the table and walk away. And maybe also keep some tissues handy, because this is a wild, dangerous ride, and there’s no way you’ll come out of it unscathed.
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
dani_reviews | Jul 22, 2016 |

Premi e riconoscimenti

Statistiche

Opere
8
Utenti
50
Popolarità
#316,248
Voto
½ 3.4
Recensioni
3
ISBN
22
Lingue
2

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