

Her characterizations feel mostly fully fleshed, and their dialogue rings true. Despite lots of Briticisms and the occasional longwinded spells of narration, David pens a mostly fast-moving page-turner. Now named Joe, Ty enters a new school a year behind and finds himself haunted by his past and torn between two girls: Ellie, a physically disabled teen who trains able-bodied runners, and her sister, Ashley. When 14-year-old Ty witnesses a brutal murder involving neighborhood thugs, he and his mom are put into a witness-protection program in a small town far away from their East London home. But she wastes readers' goodwill at the end with a conclusion both haphazard and overly moralistic, jarringly out of place in this otherwise thoughtful and well-excuted novel. Badoe's sharp and engaging prose unfolds the story with spryness, deftly navigating readers through heady social issues. Each must confront class stereotypes and re-examine the meaning of family. But when the temptations of her new life-brand-name clothes and handsome doctors-prove hard to resist, a misunderstanding cuts a rift between Gloria and Christine.

Gloria adjusts easily, studies hard and explores her newfound freedom. Her father is quick to assent, with one condition: In lieu of payment, Christine must take responsibility for Gloria's future and adopt her as a sister. Gloria is offered a job in a distant city with Christine, a doctor who needs househelp. Her one consolation, her older sister Effie, has discovered boys and all but disappeared. She failed most of her school exams, her long-unemployed father has lost himself to religion and her mother is ravaged by a mysterious sickness. Ghanaian teenager Gloria Bampo has hit a rough patch. Benson's account unfolds in a speedy, unadorned first person, doling information out to readers as he learns it himself. Benson decides it’s time to make a run for it, until he finds out that no one makes it out of Maxfield…not alive, at any rate. With no adults on campus, classes are taught by fellow students, punishments are passed on by computer and nothing seems to follow a logical path. He joins a gang, the Variants, just to survive. What he finds, however, is far from normal. Within minutes of the front doors closing-and locking-behind him, he finds himself in a fight for his life. Winning a scholarship with unexpected ease, he looks forward to establishing real friendships and getting a good education at last. Wells introduces Benson Fisher, a teen in search of a “real” life instead of a long series of unwanted foster homes-but instead of the utopia he’s searching for, he finds the direct opposite.īenson thinks he’s found the perfect school in Maxfield Academy, a private school in the wilds of New Mexico.
