You Are Breaking My Heart

December 1st, 2010

Every once and a while you run across an author that strikes a cord in you; strums the strings to your heart… makes your pulse quicken.  For me that person is Neal Shusterman.  A few months ago I read his novel “Unwind” and was blown away.  Shusterman has a way with story telling that goes beyond the lines of unique, to me they are… enlightening. Most novels teach a lesson, (this I have learned in my 20 something odd years of reading,) but very few books teach you how to live.  “Bruiser” (in Shusterman’s own words) was supposed to be a book about a boy with the ability to take away his loved ones pain, but instead it was a tale about understanding, forgiveness, addiction, denial, loss, and sacrifice. “Bruiser” was an artistic lesson in how to cope with the unimaginable.

Brewster is a loner, but not just any loner, he is Bronte’s loner. Voted “Most Likely To Go To Jail” is just one of his shining traits, and Tennyson (Bronte’s brother) is none to happy about his sis’s sudden love connection.  Hoping to rectify the situation,  Tennyson does what he does best… throws his weight around and threatens Brew, but what Tennyson doesn’t know is that it’s already to late to turn back.  See… Brew has this “gift,” he has the ability to take on the pain of those he loves, and SURPRISE he loves Bronte.  The kicker? The more he hangs around Bronte, the more he cares, and before he knows it, he’s knee deep in bruises and hell bent on keeping his secret.  Will Brew’s gift finally destroy him? Will Tennyson ever realize that you can’t grow if you don’t live and what about Bronte? Will she ever open her eyes and see the fate that is two feet in front of her face?

There is no question that Shusterman is a terrific story teller, his plots, his characters… they are (more often than not) flawless, so instead of focusing on his writing ABILITY, I want to focus on the way he chose to tell this particular story.  The easy take would have been a singular narrative, or even duel narration, but apparently that was just too damn easy, instead Shusterman decided to tell this story through the eyes of 4 different characters (Brewster, Bronte, Tennyson, & Cody – Brew’s little brother) That fact alone is commendable, but even THAT pales in comparison to the WAY in which he wrote the chapters.  Tennyson’s chapters were aggressive, self loathing and at times bitter. Bronte was written from the side of naivety and compassion. Cody was tapped with fear and Brewster’s chapters veered VERY far to the left and were written as poetry.  Talk about flexing the literary biceps.  The suspense in the book carried easily from character to character and in the end I found myself once again (Thanks Neal) crying like a 3 year old that lost her dolly.

Overall? “Bruiser” is one of the most “emotionally” moving books I have read in quite some time, and well worth the moola I threw down for it.  If you have had the opprotunity to read any of Neal’s work in the past and enjoyed it, I assure you… this one will not dissapoint, for those of you that have yet to venture into any of Shusterman’s alternative worlds, what are you waiting for?

Happy reading my fellow Kindle-ites and remember: Joy is insignificant if you’ve never experienced pain.

Click image for complete details

(4/5)

Ebay For Body Parts, How Charming!

September 27th, 2009

unwindI never thought “Roe Vs. Wade” would get so wildly out of hand, but in “Unwind” that is precisely what happend.

Imagine that you have a child, and 14 years later, while your sitting at a bar drinking martinis you decide, “Uh… I really don’t want this child anymore, he’s expensive, his grades are crap, and he doesn’t floss.”

No problem! The government can take care of that pesky little problem for you. Take him off your hands… or rather, just take his hands off.

“Unwind” is an entertaining story, regardless of how completly screwed up it is.  It follows the lives of 3 teenagers, who for one reason or another have been signed over to the state, and scheduled to be unwound.  It follows the struggle for their exstance, their search for whats left of human compassion, of people who believe in the edict to make your own choice, to weave your own path.

The trio is faced with forging through a society that would rather use them for their parts instead of their abilities as a whole. “Got a healthy heart? Great…you really won’t be needing it anymore so lets just give it to someone who is worth a damn!”

Along the way they meet an “end of the worlder” with blue hair, and boy who has power problems and crudly drawn shark tattoo, you get to see what happens when your brain short circuts, and best of all you are introduced to an Admiral with a shady background and a disturbing set of teeth.

It is well written, the charachter development is supurb, and most of all, it makes you think. Which I guess could be considered good or bad for some of y’all out there.  My vote? Read it. You won’t regret it.

Happy traveling my peeeps, and remember your life is what you make it. So make it good, or I may take your eyes. Mine are crap and I’m tired of wearing contacts.

For a full book description click image

(5/5)


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