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Paperback Bounce Book

ISBN: 0439853532

ISBN13: 9780439853538

Bounce

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

Evyn's had enough problems in her life,starting with her mother's death when shewas young. But now her father's thrown awhole new batch her way. Not only is hemarrying a woman Evyn hardly knows,... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Getting Adjusted

When 13 year old Evyn's father breaks some big news to her, she is sure that this will mean the end of her world. Her mother died when Evyn was one, so she grew up with only her brother Mack and her father Birdie. Twelve years after her mom's death, her dad meets a woman named Eleni and they decide that they are going to get married. Evyn is in for a surprise when she learns that her future stepmother has a load of children. But why is the woman who is to become her stepmother being so especially kind and nice? That is what Evyn is determined to find out. Evyn must adjust to her new life but she refuses to forget her old one. Can she do it? I liked that this book was so realistic and how easy it was to relate to. The author also did a great job conveyed Evyn's sadness, fear, and hope.

A Teen's Fears About Moving and Taking on a New Family

Spoilers. This story of a modern-day Brady Bunch type remarriage with stepsiblings story captures the ache of moving and fearing that the people you love the most are changing before your eyes. In this case, for Evyn, it's her father, Birdie, who is changing, both in appearance and style, and when he and Eleni announce they're having a baby, Evyn is even more fearful that her role in the family will be displaced. Even her best friend back home is making new best friends, while her brother discovers the theater and settles in, and she doesn't know where she fits in. To cope, she talks to her long-dead mother, and these conversations are the most heartfelt in the book as Evyn teaches herself, by proxy, to let go. There's also a crush involved, though I won't spoil the fun of that for you. This is a fast read and while it doesn't pack quite the emotional wallop of Friend's previous YA novels Lush and Perfect, it does capture Evyn's sense that her world is collapsing and she doesn't know who to trust.

A sweet story to cheer anyone up

Evyn has never felt like she's completely fit in, but she can generally make do. And she was doing just fine with her wacky father, her nerdy older brother, and her best friend Jules, but now her father is getting remarried. It's been twelve years since Evyn's mother died, but Evyn doesn't want to trade what little memories she has of her mother for a woman she barely knows and that woman's six children, not to mention a new home in an entirely new setting. It's almost too much change for Evyn to handle at once. How's a girl supposed to accept all this new when all she wants is for the old to be back? Bounce is a sweet and moving coming of age story. Friend captures the awkward tween/teen years so well in Evyn's character. Thirteen is a borderline age, when the real teenage years loom ever closer and you're torn between wanting to stay the same forever and wishing you were much cooler. Evyn has to deal with all this, her friends trading her for popularity and her new classmates' appearances pressuring her to change the way she dresses, in addition to an even greater change--a new family. Evyn is very resistant to this change because all the new additions to her life are too overwhelming to just take in a stride. Friend portrays this angst so realistically, and in a way readers can relate to. Readers will love Evyn and sympathize with her because of the emotional trials she faces but also because of how she learns to deal with all the changes in her life. Though Evyn responds in a childish way at first, she matures throughout the story into a more understanding young lady. This understanding and eventual acceptance is what makes Bounce so sweet. It reminds the readers that the future always holds something to look forward to. Bounce is a good pick for any teen or tween in a rut. I recommend this novel for fans of Perfect by Natasha Friend, Class Favorite by Taylor Morris, and The Teashop Girls by Laura Schaefer.

Wonderful!

I just wrote a review for Lush saying it was my favorite by Friend but I have changed my mind...I think I liked this one best. It really doesn't deal with problems like eating disorders or alcoholics like in Friends other novels but about Evyn and her brother, their father gets remarried to a women with a lot of kids. It's pretty much about how Evyn's life falls apart. I think some people would call it unbelievable but it always feels like when something goes wrong everything else does! I really liked Bounce!

Courtesy of Teens Read Too

Evyn's father has just announced that he is getting remarried, and they will be moving from Maine to Boston immediately. With barely time to say good-bye to her best friend, Jules, Evyn finds herself living with a constantly smiling and cooking stepmother and five new step-siblings. Evyn's mother died in a car accident when Evyn was only one. Since then it's been just her brother Mackey and their dad, who they both call Birdie. Things have gone along just fine. Now her world has turned upside down. It is one major adjustment at a time. There is a new school to get used to. A group of popular girls seems ready to admit Evyn into their sacred circle, but she soon finds out it's because they have a total fascination with her new stepbrother, Ajax. Then there's the loud, over-friendly stepmother to contend with, and the sudden changes that have her father acting like someone she's never met before. In an effort to deal with all of the change, Evyn finds herself continuing the mental conversations she's been having with her dead mother for as long as she can remember. It helps for a while, but Evyn eventually realizes she is going to need to make some adjustments and learn to live in this new and strange family arrangement. Natasha Friend, author of Perfect: A Novel and Lush, takes readers on the roller coaster ride that is Evyn's new life. You'll feel her frustration, sadness, and fear on every page. Reviewed by: Sally Kruger, aka "Readingjunky"
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