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Bystander

240p. 978-0-31237-906-3.
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Gr 6-9 Eric Hayes has moved from Ohio to Long Island, NY, with his mother and younger brother. His schizophrenic father left long ago. Eric soon meets Griffin Connelly, a handsome kid with natural leadership, lots of charisma, and a real mean streak. While Griffin is the perfect bully, David Hallenback is the perfect victim: beaten down and willing to do anything to get Griffin's approval. At first, Eric is a bystander, not participating in the bullying but not doing anything to stop it. However, several events move him out of this passive role: Griffin steals from him and reveals Eric's confidences about his father; adults at school address bullying; and Mary, a girl he likes, takes a stand against it. Eric realizes that his silence makes him complicit and speaks out, only to become Griffin's next victim. Preller has perfectly nailed the middle school milieu, and his characters are well developed with authentic voices. The novel has a parablelike quality, steeped in a moral lesson, yet not ploddingly didactic. The action moves quickly, keeping readers engaged. The ending is realistic: there's no strong resolution, no punishment or forgiveness. Focusing on the large majority of young people who stand by mutely and therefore complicitly, this must-read book is a great discussion starter that pairs well with a Holocaust unit."Connie Tyrrell Burns, Mahoney Middle School, South Portland, ME" Copyright 2010 Media Source Inc.
Seventh grader Eric moves with his mom and brother to Long Island; his mentally ill father remains absent from the family. Eric falls in with a group of boys dominated by enigmatic bully Griffin. When Eric dares to challenge the gang about one of their vicious pranks, he becomes a victim himself. The story's anti-bullying message, though overt, isn't heavy-handed or didactic.
Well-defined characters. The plot flows logically and naturally. A quick read that doesn’t feel rushed. Solid writing and voice.

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