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The Way Back from Broken (Fiction - Young Adult)

af Amber J. Keyser

MedlemmerAnmeldelserPopularitetGennemsnitlig vurderingSamtaler
375664,250 (3.5)Ingen
Young Adult Fiction. Young Adult Literature. HTML:

Rakmen Cannon's life is turning out to be one sucker punch after another. His baby sister died in his arms, his parents are on the verge of divorce, and he's flunking out of high school. The only place he fits in is with the other art therapy kids stuck in the basement of Promise House, otherwise known as support group central. Not that he wants to be there. Talking doesn't bring back the dead.

When he's shipped off to the Canadian wilderness with ten-year-old Jacey, another member of the support group, and her mom, his summer goes from bad to worse. He can't imagine how eight weeks of canoeing and camping could be anything but awful.

Yet despite his expectations, the vast and unforgiving backcountry just might give Rakmen a chance to find the way back from broken . . . if he's brave enough to grab it.

Amber J. Keyser's debut novel is a wrenching and brutally honest story of adversity and hope.

.
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Viser 5 af 5
Pity that I read this book straight after reading "Only Child" as I was a bit jaded towards sibling death by the time I finished it . Rakmen's baby sister died in his arms and so he and his mother attend a neighborhood grief group. His mother goes upstairs and talks to the other mothers while he goes downstairs and does lame art with the regulars. He only goes because a girl he likes also attends after her sister as killed in a car accident.
Enter Rakmen's biology teacher and her extroverted 10 year old daughter Jacey which takes R through a strange course of events. His teacher has lost a baby boy and jacey is obsessed with the concept of being a "good sister" and having a brother. She latches on to Rakmen as an older brother figure, so much so that when Jacey's mum and Jacey go out to the wilderness, R is taken along as a pseudo-babysitter. { Now I had real problems with this, as a teacher there is NO WAY I would EVER take one of my students with me on holidays but if you can get over that then...}
When the three set off for a long hike with a canoe, the inevitable happens, Jacey's mother breaks her ankle and so Rakmen and Jacey must hike through the American wilderness to get help.
It's an ok book that I think students will like - the sibling and survival elements particularly BUT I found it a bit contrived... ( )
  nicsreads | Jun 6, 2018 |
Read this book in one straight sitting, with occasional stops to breathe; it's that engaging.

So vivid and real. Touching and tender, without an ounce of saccharine. A refreshingly honest perspective on loss and survival in all its complexity. ( )
  dcmr | Jul 4, 2017 |
Fifteen-year-old Rakmen’s baby sister died in his arms from an undiagnosed heart murmur. Awash with grief, his parents blame him and each other. His mother begins attending therapy sessions at Promise House, a place that promises to help grief filled; broken parents recover from the loss of their children.

As the broken brother of a lost sister, Rakmen is forced to attend the children’s sessions where he meets nine (or ten) year-old Jacey. Her baby brother was stillborn, throwing her mother (Rakmen’s teacher, Mrs. Tatlas) into a dangerously fragile mindset, and causing Jacey to wonder why she’d been robbed of the opportunity to become a big sister.

For some unknown reason, and to his eternal displeasure, Jacey becomes very attached to Rakmen. Mrs. Tatlas suggests they travel together to her uncle’s cabin in Canada for some R & R so, without any pushback from his parents, the three of them head to the wilderness. When an accident happens, it is up to Rakmen and Jacey to learn to work together to save all their lives.

I couldn’t really get into this book. I found it strange that Rakmen’s parents would let him go off for the entire summer with a perfect stranger, even though she was his teacher. Also, Jacey was supposed to be nine or ten, yet she acted more like six or seven. There were a few other issues, including grammatical errors scattered throughout so, overall, it wasn’t a win for me.

I’ll leave it up to you 14 and older readers to decide if you want to read it or not.

Book review link: https://shouldireaditornot.wordpress.com/2017/04/22/the-way-back-from-broken-amb... ( )
  sunshinealma | Apr 22, 2017 |
The Way Back From Broken captures the pain, bewilderment and betrayal felt when a younger sibling dies. Two children, Rakman and Jacey, each of whom has experienced the death of a sibling, end up taking a canoe trip with Jacey's mom who just happens to be Rakman's high school science teacher, and who is grieving her still born son. She injures herself, and the two children must make the four day trip back to civilization to get help for Mrs. Tatlas. Although the content deals with the heartbreaking topic of death of young children, the tale is not depressing and contains seemingly authentic descriptions of the feelings of the surviving children. Much of their canoe journey is metaphoric for having the courage to continue on. I was able to read this through an advance digital copy provided by Net Gallery. One warning is that early on in the story there is reference to a friend who wants to get laid, and the language is a bit rough in places, so it is probably best read by those who are older. ( )
  JRlibrary | Aug 6, 2015 |
Fifteen-year-old Rakman and his family are devastated when his infant sister, Dora, dies in his arms. Everyone processes the death differently. While his father, a nurse, uses alcohol and avoidance, Rakman and his mother attend therapy sessions at Promise House. But attending the support group, talking, and writing in his journal doesn’t change the way Rakman feels: guilty. His grades plummet and after a brawl that leaves him bloodied and with a broken rib, his parents decide to ship him off on “vacation” with a ten-year-old girl and her mother—Rakman’s high school science teacher, Mrs. Tatlas, who is grieving her still born son. The camping trip goes from bad, an infestation of mice, to worse, when the plumbing explodes and floods the cabin. Mrs. Tatlas snaps and drags the two children Au large through the Canadian wilderness.

Keyser’s debut novel is an emotional journey through the grieving process, seen from a variety of perspectives. Rakman, and his side-kick, Jacey, are likable protagonists who struggle to survive the extreme mental and physical challenges thrown in their paths ( )
  kimpiddington | Aug 6, 2015 |
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Young Adult Fiction. Young Adult Literature. HTML:

Rakmen Cannon's life is turning out to be one sucker punch after another. His baby sister died in his arms, his parents are on the verge of divorce, and he's flunking out of high school. The only place he fits in is with the other art therapy kids stuck in the basement of Promise House, otherwise known as support group central. Not that he wants to be there. Talking doesn't bring back the dead.

When he's shipped off to the Canadian wilderness with ten-year-old Jacey, another member of the support group, and her mom, his summer goes from bad to worse. He can't imagine how eight weeks of canoeing and camping could be anything but awful.

Yet despite his expectations, the vast and unforgiving backcountry just might give Rakmen a chance to find the way back from broken . . . if he's brave enough to grab it.

Amber J. Keyser's debut novel is a wrenching and brutally honest story of adversity and hope.

.

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