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Over the course of a single summer day, ten teenagers in Salem, Massachusetts, will discover important truths about themselves and each other.
There is Nicole, whose decision to betray her best friend will shock everyone, most of all herself; Kelly, who meets the convicted felon she has been writing to for years; Maria, whose definition of a true friend is someone who will cut her. Then there is Sadie, a chubby eleven-year-old whose mother forces her to wear a "please don't feed me" sign stapled to her shirt; while Joy, a fifteen-year-old waitress hoping for true intimacy narrowly escapes a very dark fate. Derik discovers that his usual good looks and charm won't help him hold onto the girl he wants, while nineteen-year-old drifter, Mearl, is desperately looking for a place to call home. Sean is torn between his loyalty to his girlfriend and the possibility of finding something more with her friend, while Ginger's single-minded pursuit to bring down her nemesis only proves that they may be more alike than she thought.
Seamlessly woven together, this incredibly powerful and compelling collection of stories chronicles the very real trials of today's teen experience.
The title reflects both metaphoric and actual spilling of the life force in every encounter comprising this novel. Stolarz, author of Blue Is for Nightmares (Llewellyn, 2003/VOYA April 2004), offers ten young narrators who describe the drama of daily life across eleven hours of a summer day. Ranging in age from eleven to just over twenty-one and connected to each other through friendship, passion, loneliness, lust, accident, and birth, the narrators' stories and viewpoints stand well clarified and unique, with the building tensions among them creating a unifying force. Kelly's best friend, Nicole, loses her virginity to Sean, Kelly's boyfriend, while Kelly, three thousand miles from their Massachusetts home, is finally meeting Robby, a young man with whom she has been infatuated throughout his prison term. Maria, friend to both Kelly and Nicole, gets Sadie to add to the bleeding scratches Maria is collecting compulsively on her arm-but then Sadie has to go home to face the bloodless abuse her mother metes out in the name of parental concern. When Kelly deserts Robby at the diner where they meet, he winds up with the waitress, Joy, and does not murder her despite their revisiting the scene of the crime that sent him to prison. Plot and character are equally important here, and the author is clever enough to keep the story arcs braided rather than tangled. Although none of the characters is wholly likeable, their motives and emotions are credible and each has at least one sympathetic facet.
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August 03, 2009: the story line is great. all the characters are connected in one way or another, and it is wonderful. i highly reccomend.
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July 09, 2009: great book. I love how everyone is connected.