The Outsiders by S. E. Hinton

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(Other Format)

  • Age Range: Young Adult
  • Pub. Date: October 1999
  • 180pp
  • Sales Rank: 276,086

    Reader Rating: (1450 ratings)

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    • Overview
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: October 1999
    • Publisher: Turtleback Books: A Division of Sanval
    • Format: Other Format, 180pp
    • Sales Rank: 276,086
    • Age Range: Young Adult

    Synopsis

    The Outsiders is a book that delves deeply into the hearts, minds, and stories of a group that had no voice before S. E. Hinton gave them one. She began writing the book at age 15, spurred on by the disturbing trend she saw growing in her high school towards division between groups. "I was worried and angered by the social situation," Hinton writes. "I saw two groups at the extreme ends of the social scale behaving in an idiotic fashion -- one group was being condemned and one wasn't.... When a friend of mine was beaten up for no other reason than that some people didn't like the way he combed his hair, I took my anger out by writing about it."

    Thirty years after it was first published, The Outsiders still carries the same frightening and unifying messages for teens (and readers of all ages). The ruthlessly realistic and violent story of the Greasers and the Socs, rival gangs from very different sides of the railroad tracks, is narrated by Ponyboy Curtis, a smart, sensitive kid who has grown to become one of the most recognizable figures in the history of young adult literature. Any teen who has ever felt isolated or different can identify with Ponyboy, a kid forced to be tough on the outside, but who underneath is just as scared and needy as anyone. Hinton herself has said that she has never written a character as close to her own self as Ponyboy is. Young Adult fiction was shaped and defined by Susan Eloise Hinton, and the realism she attached to the genre became the norm, enabling later writers like Robert Cormier and Judy Blume to find characters and voices that actually spoke to adolescents. Since 1967, Ponyboy has become the hero for countless teenagers nationwide as The Outsiders stands to influence an entire new legion of adolescents who need Ponyboy as much as ever.

    Annotation

    Three brothers struggle to stay together after their parents' death, as they search for an identity among the conflicting values of their adolescent society in which they find themselves "outsiders."

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    Biography

    S.E. Hinton lives in Tulsa, Oklahoma.

    Customer Reviews

    I will definitely be reading this book again.by sbc0596

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    December 03, 2009: This book was one of the best books i have ever read. I found the difficult situations that they got into very interesting. The greasers seemed to live in a bad part of town, and always had no problem finding trouble. Although their problem solving wasn't always ideal, it seemed to be the best way they knew how to handle things. I was glued to this book to the point where i couldn't put it down. The way that the greasers acted and talked intrigued me. If gangs and bad boys are your thing then this is the book for you. I would definitely recommend this book to my friends.

    AMAZING!!!!!! =]]by TaylorWaylor

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    November 20, 2009: The Outsiders is a compelling realistic fiction novel by S.E. Hinton. This book is one you will never want to put down. There are parts that are funny, sad, and parts that will leave you in shock. This is an amazing book. The setting of the book is in a neighborhood where the main character lives in the Early 1950's.

    The main character, Ponyboy, is part of a gang of "greasers" with his two brothers, Soda and Darry, a quiet boy named Johnny, a boy named Dally who has a huge record with the police, another boy named Two-Bit, who is a great friend, and Soda's best friend, Steve. The greasers have issues with the "Socs", who are the rich kids. When Johnny and Ponyboy are getting mugged by the Socs, Johnny kills one of them in self-defense, they both realize that the police will be after them. Dally advises them to go into a church in the country to hide. When Dally comes to visit them, Johnny decides to go to the police and explain. He doesn't want Ponyboy in trouble because of what he did. When they return to the church to get their things, they discover that the church is on fire and there are children in the church. Johnny and Ponyboy go into the church to save the children even though Dally is trying to hold them back. They get the children out fine but Ponyboy's back is on fire. Dally puts out the fire by slapping him on the back. That knocks out Ponyboy and burns Dally's arm. The church collapsed on Johnny, Dally saves him but things aren't looking good for Johnny in the hospital.

    S.E. Hinton tells this story from Ponyboy's point of view and the realism because of that is incredible. He discusses the greasers and their conflicts with the Socs. The language that the greasers use isn't very proper but it kind of makes the story seem more real.

    This book is one of the most amazing, and moving books I've ever read. It tells a very compelling story that will make you laugh and cry. I would recommend this book to people of all ages but mostly teenagers because the book is about a group of teenagers and their struggles.


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