Belzhar
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- R$ 27,90
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- R$ 27,90
Descrição da editora
ONE OF TIME AND NPR’S TEN BEST YA BOOKS OF THE YEAR • From the New York Times bestselling author of The Female Persuasion comes a “smart and engrossing” (School Library Journal) story of a young girl who finds solace after the tragic loss of her boyfriend at a boarding school in Vermont.
“Expect depth and razor sharp wit in this [young adult] novel from the author of The Interestings.”—Entertainment Weekly
“A prep school tale with a supernatural-romance touch.”—Glamour
There’s a place where the lost go to be found.
If life were fair, Jam Gallahue would still be at home in New Jersey with her sweet British boyfriend, Reeve Maxfield. She’d be watching old comedy sketches with him. She’d be kissing him in the library stacks.
She certainly wouldn’t be at The Wooden Barn, a therapeutic boarding school in rural Vermont, signed up for an exclusive, supposedly life-changing class called Special Topics in English that focuses—only and entirely—on the works of Sylvia Plath.
But life isn’t fair. Reeve has been gone for almost a year, and Jam is still mourning.
When a journal-writing assignment leads Jam into a mysterious other-world she and her classmates call Belzhar, she discovers a realm where the untainted past is restored, and she can feel Reeve’s arms around her once again. But, as the pages of her journal begin to fill up, Jam must confront hidden truths and ultimately decide what she’s willing to sacrifice to reclaim her loss.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
When 10th grader Jam Gallahue meets British exchange student Reeve Maxfield, she fees like she finally understands love, and when she loses him, she can't get over it. Her grief eventually lands her at the Wooden Barn, a therapeutic boarding school for "emotionally fragile, highly intelligent" teenagers. There, she's selected for Special Topics in English, a legendary class whose eccentric teacher handpicks her students and gives out journals that, Jam learns, seem to have the ability to take students back to their lives before the disasters that changed them. Making her YA debut, acclaimed author Wolitzer writes crisply and sometimes humorously about sadness, guilt, and anger Jam's fellow students each have lines that divide their lives into before and after, and all of them need to move forward. Jam's class is studying Sylvia Plath, and Wolitzer weaves her life and work into the story with a light hand. Some of this lightness is missing at the end, when Jam reflects how the journals saved her and her classmates, but this is otherwise a strong, original book. Ages 14 up.