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record 1 of 1 for search "07068656{001}"
After [kit]
    Prose, Francine, 1947-
Publisher: Joanna Cotler/HarperCollins,
Pub date: c2003.
Pages: 10 copies in plastic container +
ISBN: 0060080817
Item info: No copies currently available. Place Hold .
10 copies total in all locations. 
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CHANTILLY REGIONAL Copies Material Location
KIT YFIC PRO 10 BK+FOLDER 1 Other Checked out
KIT YFIC PRO BOOK 8 Book Checked out
KIT YFIC PRO FOLDER 1 Book Checked out
Summary
Now in paperback--a haunting novel about what happens when protection at a school goes too far and what it means to have freedom extinguished in the name of safety. From the acclaimed author of the National Book Award finalist "Blue Angel." Distributed by Syndetic Solutions, Inc.
Publishers Weekly Review
This novel set in the near future offers a chilling examination of controlling forces undermining individual rights. After a shooting takes place at Pleasant Valley, a Massachusetts high school, it seems reasonable that extra security precautions should be implemented at neighboring Central High. However, Tom Bishop and his "Smart Jock" friends grow uneasy as Central High's rules (and punishments for breaking them) become more and more extreme. Tom reluctantly cooperates with the stricter dress code (which, for example, prohibits students from wearing anything red). He also puts up with routine backpack checks, random locker searches and periodic urine tests in order to avoid getting suspended, or worse, being sent to Operation Turnaround, where "kids check in, and they don't check out." The sinister clinical psychologist Dr. Willner, who has usurped their beloved principal, finally pushes the narrator beyond his tolerance limit when he asks Tom to throw a game against Pleasant Valley to raise the spirits of its grieving students. No matter what action Tom takes, he realizes that he has much to lose-and discovers that other classmates have faced fatal consequences. In her first novel for young adults, Prose succeeds in keeping suspense high and manages, for the most part, to connect shocking events to a reality familiar to most teens. Her introduction of a science-fiction thread seems chillingly plausible (Dr. Willard uses e-mails to brainwash the teens' parents). This drama raises all-too-relevant questions about the fine line between safety as a means of protection versus encroachment on individual rights and free will. Sure to spur heated discussions. Ages 10-up. Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. From: Reed Elsevier Inc. Copyright Reed Business Information
School Library Journal Review
Gr 6-10-A school-shooting incident in nearby Pleasant Valley causes Tom's high school administrators to be worried about a ripple effect. A crisis counselor is hired and a watchdog atmosphere grows as the teens' privileges rapidly disappear. Tom and his sophomore classmates are annoyed but not overly concerned about the new security restrictions until they notice eerie disappearances of friends who fail to conform, including Tom's two best friends. The random drug tests, backpack searches, parental e-mail, and dress codes soon expand into mind-controlling daily assemblies, book censorship, and camps for "behavior" problems. After a tip from a Pleasant Valley basketball player, Tom is convinced that students everywhere are being sent away and hopes his father hasn't also been brainwashed via the e-mails from the school authorities. The pace picks up as Tom and friend Becca are caught trying to alert their fellow students to the menacing counselor and know that their lives are at risk. There is suspense in the threat, though readers never learn what has happened to those who disappeared, except for one student who "died." A prosaic style and simple dialogue provide reluctant readers with an opportunity to enjoy a lengthy, frightening story. More mature readers interested in school-violence stories might prefer Joyce Carol Oates's Big Mouth & Ugly Girl (HarperCollins, 2002).-Vicki Reutter, Cazenovia High School, NYCopyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. From: Reed Elsevier Inc. Copyright Reed Business Information
Booklist Review
Following a Columbine-like massacre at a nearby school, the students at Central High find their world turned upside down. The arrival of a grief counselor brings a new era of repression--no cell phones, no reading Catcher in the Rye, no hanging out at the mall. Even worse, students guilty of breaking the rules have begun to disappear--supposedly to a kind of detention camp called Operation Turnaround. Nobody ever comes back. Esteemed adult author Prose wants to make a political statement about the gradual process by which we lose personal freedom, but she runs into trouble. Caught somewhere between allegory, dystopian fantasy, and YA problem novel, her book never finds a home for itself. There are moments of real terror (the finale feels like Hitchcock's The Birds), but many of the best fantasy elements--brainwashing the kids' parents with e-mail--seem patently ridiculous in a realistic context. Yet, there is considerable appeal: the suspense builds effectively, and the archetypal conflict--good-hearted kids versus an evil principal--is always a crowd pleaser. BillOtt. From: Syndetics Solutions, Inc. Distributed by Syndetic Solutions, Inc.

Childrens Literature Comprehensive Database Review

Full View From Catalog
key: 07068656
ISBN: 0060080817
Local Dewey call num: KIT YFIC PRO
Personal Author: Prose, Francine, 1947-
Title: After [kit] / by Francine Prose.
Edition: Book group discussion kit
Publication info: New York : Joanna Cotler/HarperCollins, c2003.
Physical descrip: 10 copies in plastic container + folder.
Price: 10 BK+FOLDER
General Note: Kit intended for use by book groups.
General Note: Books are accompanied by questions for book group discussion.
Summary: In the aftermath of a nearby school shooting, a grief and crisis counselor takes over Central High School and enacts increasingly harsh measures to control students, while those who do not comply disappear.
Subject term: Teenagers--Massachusetts--Young adult fiction.
Subject term: School shootings--Young adult fiction.
Subject term: High school students--Massachusetts--Young adult fiction.
Subject term: School violence--Young adult fiction.
Subject term: Conspiracies--Young adult fiction.
Geographic term: Massachusetts--Young adult fiction.
Local subject: Book group discussion kits, Young adult (Fairfax County Public Library)
Local subject: Summer reading, 2005 (Young adult)
892: bk
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