Jump
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- €5.49
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- €5.49
Publisher Description
A young daredevil seeks the ultimate thrill in this gripping tale of adventure and trust.
“Equal parts entertaining and provocative. An incisive reflection on endurance, independence, belonging, self-knowledge, and love.”—Publishers Weekly, starred review
“Will please fans of both Anthony Horowitz and Meg Cabot.”—Kirkus Reviews
JUMP.
That’s what sixteen-year-old P.K. has done. She’s taken an impulsive leap from her restrictive life with her family into a life of total adventure: running away to go rock climbing out West with Critter, a guy she barely knows. At first, everything’s amazing. The climbing is unbelievable, and she and Critter have great chemistry. But then the cops catch up to them (with an arrest warrant for Critter), and P.K. has to decide who to believe: this amazing guy whom she trusts with her life—or the cops, who want her to believe he may take her life.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Told through the alternating present-tense perspectives of two runaways who connect through their love of rock climbing, Carbone s (Blood on the River) picaresque novel is equal parts entertaining and provocative. Strong-willed 16-year-old P.K. runs away to avoid being shipped to boarding school, and gentle-natured Critter, who has the ability to see colors that indicate people s emotions (for reasons he keeps to himself for some time), escapes from a psychiatric hospital. The teens hitchhike to Las Vegas and jump at the chance to make the first-ever ascent of a steep rock face. Chapters range from a few sentences to a few pages, and the descriptions of the pair s climbs are riveting especially a treacherous scramble up a cliff with police in pursuit. Yet the narrators psychological explorations are as exhilarating as their physical exploits. The allegedly unbalanced Critter takes serenity to new heights as he shares with P.K. logical, relatable coping mechanisms ( You re scared of the future.... look at where you are now. Is there anything to be afraid of? ). An incisive reflection on endurance, independence, belonging, self-knowledge, and love, this story should find a wide audience. Ages 12 up.