Harmless by Dana Reinhardt

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(Hardcover)

Average Customer Rating: Customer Rating for this product is 3.5 out of 5 (3 ratings)

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  • Publisher: Wendy Lamb Books
  • Pub. Date: February 2007
  • ISBN-13: 9780385746991
  • Sales Rank: 123,868
  • Age Range: Young Adult
  • 229pp
 
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Synopsis

There was a man. He had a knife. He attacked us down by the river.

It was just a harmless little lie.

Anna, Emma and Mariah concoct a story about why they're late getting home one night—a story that will replace their parents' anger with
concern. They just have to stand by it. No matter what. Suddenly the police are involved, and the town demands that someone be punished. And then there is the man who is arrested and accused of a crime that never happened.

Publishers Weekly

Reinhardt's dramatic novel about three girls who tell a lie to avoid getting in trouble, only to find that the lie has terrible consequences far beyond their original intentions, is even more compelling on audio. Each of the narrators takes on the first-person accounts of one of the girls: jaded, rebellious Mariah; shy, sheltered Anna; moody, introspective Emma. The narrators excel at conveying the girls' anxiety, impulsiveness and guilt, as well as the desire for independence and excitement that led to their initial misbehavior. A slight criticism is that the actresses playing Emma and Anna have very similar voices, so listeners must pay close attention to the name given at the beginning of each section and to the narrative details to keep track of which character is speaking. Otherwise, this is a production that will keep listeners riveted. An exclusive bonus interview with the author is included. Ages 13-up. (Mar.)

Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information

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Biography

Dana Reinhardt lives in Los Angeles with her family. This is her second novel. She is the author of A Brief Chapter in My Impossible life.

Customer Reviews

Number of Reviews: 3
Average Rating: Customer Rating for this product is 3.5 out of 5
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Customer Rating for this product is 1 out of 5 Terrible.
Michelle, A reviewer, 05/26/2008

I read this book and it didn't really have a story at all. Just a poorly written portion of 3 girls' life. There was no good. It was almost like a news article you would see in a newspaper. Don't read it.

Customer Rating for this product is 4 out of 5 How much trouble could lying cause?
Ms. Bechard (ask_MsB@msn.com) , a high school teacher, 01/28/2008

In a culture where lying has become common place, Harmless presents a fascinating dilemma. Hard on the pages in my reading order of the Pretty Little Liars Club series, I fully expected this to be a cheap wannabe. As with Shepard’s stories, the tale is told from the perspective of three friends: Emma, Mariah, and Anna. Plot similarities include the main characters’ attendance at Orsonville Day School 'an exclusive prep school', parents who are instructors at a college, and fathers who have been involved in some way with college coeds. The similarities seem to end there. The friendship between Emma and Anna was forged in the third grade when Emma moved from New York to the sleepy town of Orsonville. Mariah is an interesting wild child who is thrown into the mix. Emma and Anna have never really been part of the social scene, and Mariah slowly enfolds them into her somewhat scandalous escapades. When the girls run the risk of getting caught at a party, they quickly make up a lie about a mythical man who accosts and attacks them at the river. They cook up the tale of how the other two girls think quickly and help Emma fend off the unwanted attack, and then proceed to tell that story to their parents and subsequently the police. The lie then begins to take on a life of its own from the girls becoming town heroes of sorts to the eventual arrest and incarceration of an indigent man. While the storytelling is not as flawless as, oh, say, Sara Shepard’s Flawless, it is, nonetheless a well-told cautionary tale. This is a book that would have a curricular tie to classes focusing on legal and ethical issues. The profanity level is low and the sexuality is generally limited to allusions rather than descriptions.

Also recommended: Pretty Little Liars series

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