From Publishers Weekly Ten-year-old Joy is upset and fearful when in June her artist father moves the family from affluent, all-white Woodland Hills into a house he has renovated in a rundown, mostly black neighborhood in central Los Angeles. To her relief, she quickly makes friends with Neesha, the only other girl on the block, who shows her the ropes on Ibarra Street while tartly disabusing her of common white misconceptions about African Americans. When gang members threaten to deal crack at an empty house on the block, the girls take the initiative and by August turn the house into a work of art that unites the multi-hued neighborhood and keeps the enemy at bay. Koertge (Confess-O-Rama) presents an inspiring vision of racial harmony and community solidarity, along the way skewering prejudices liberal and reactionary, white and black. It is, however, a bit of a stretch to believe that one month of art and neighborly goodwill will keep the bad guys away forever. And observant readers may be dissatisfied that Neesha's important query, "Are you going to go with me, or are you going to private school?" is left hanging. Ages 8-12. Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc. From School Library Journal Grade 4-7?When her artist father moves 10-year-old Joy and her mother from suburban Woodland Hills to a mixed inner-city neighborhood, the girl feels as though her blond ponytail sticks out like a sore thumb and her mother is sure something bad will happen. However, over the summer Joy finds new friends, including Mr. and Mrs. Park, who own the grocery store across the street, and Neesha, who is her age. She learns to talk to the homeless man, Dimitrios, and to stand up to the neighborhood tough boys. When the relative safety of the neighborhood is threatened by drug dealers who want to take over an empty house, Joy and Neesha work together with their neighbors to drive them away. Koertge's messages?the vitality of urban life and the strength of community cooperation?overwhelm this book, which lacks the humor of his books for older readers. The neighbors are representative types rather than fully developed characters: Neesha's strict grandmother; Mrs. Santiago, a fortune teller from the Caribbean; Mr. Lossi, left over from the area's Italian days; the Korean store owners; Mr. Jardin, who distrusts all whites. Joy and Neesha, themselves, don't really come alive as distinct individuals. The neighborhood's problem is real, but the resolution is too pat, even if Koertge allows the girls to realize that the gangsters from Nasty Street may not stay away forever. Paul Fleischman's Seedfolks (HarperCollins, 1997) makes the same points more effectively.?Kathleen Isaacs, Edmund Burke School, Washington, DCCopyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc. See all Editorial Reviews
评分
评分
评分
评分
我得承认,这本书的阅读门槛稍微有点高,尤其是在语言风格上。它不像那些流行的通俗小说那样,用最直接、最口语化的方式让你快速进入。相反,它的句子结构常常带着一种古典的韵律感,偶尔还会冒出一些生僻的词汇或者引用一些我不太熟悉的典故。这导致我在阅读初期不得不频繁停下来查阅,这在某种程度上确实打断了阅读的流畅性。但是,一旦你适应了这种“仪式感”般的阅读方式,你会发现,这种略带距离感的、考究的文字,恰恰是支撑起整个故事宏大主题的骨架。它拒绝迎合快餐文化,坚持用一种更严肃、更艺术化的方式来呈现故事的核心冲突。书中的象征主义手法运用得炉火纯青,很多场景和物件都承载了超越其本身的意义,比如一座桥、一个特定的天气现象,它们反复出现,不断加深主题的厚度。这迫使我不能仅仅做一个被动的接收者,而必须积极地参与到意义的构建中去,这对于我这种老是想找点“干货”的读者来说,是一种非常棒的智力挑战。
评分关于这本书的氛围营造,我必须着重夸赞一下。它成功地在我脑海中构建了一个既熟悉又疏离的“镜像城市”。这个城市,它拥有现实中大都市的骨架——摩天大楼、拥挤的交通、无眠的霓虹灯,但在作者的笔下,这一切都被镀上了一层疏离和疏离的质感。很多场景的描写,明明是光天化日之下,却透着一股子寒意,仿佛每个人都在用自己的方式与周围的环境进行着一场无声的战争。这种环境描写,不仅仅是背景板,它本身就是一股强大的角色力量,影响着人物的决策和情绪走向。书中对于声音的运用也非常高明,不是那种震耳欲聋的喧嚣,而是那些微弱的、被忽略的声音——比如深夜里远处的警笛声,老式电梯缓慢上升时发出的嘎吱声,这些听觉细节极大地增强了阅读的沉浸感和代入感。整体来说,它提供了一种既压抑又引人入胜的阅读体验,让人欲罢不能地想知道,在这座钢铁丛林的深处,到底隐藏着怎样惊人的秘密。
评分这本书最让我感到惊喜的,是它对“记忆”与“身份”这两个哲学命题的探讨。它没有提供一个简单的答案,而是通过一群人物错综复杂的关系网,展现了身份认同的流动性和脆弱性。故事中的几位核心人物,他们似乎都在努力拼凑自己破碎的过去,或者试图摆脱一个早已定型的标签。这种追寻自我的过程,充满了迷茫和痛苦,但又时不时闪烁着希望的光芒。作者对人性幽暗面的刻画毫不留情,那些关于背叛、牺牲和自我欺骗的桥段,读起来让人心里发堵,但又不得不承认,这才是人性的全貌。我尤其欣赏作者对待配角的态度,他们不是推进剧情的工具人,每个人都有自己的生存逻辑和不可告人的秘密,他们的存在极大地丰富了主题的层次感。读完之后,我花了好几天时间,还在不断回味其中的某些对话,思考如果换做是我,在那种极端压力下,会做出怎样的选择。这本书真正做到了“余音绕梁”,它不只是一本书,更像是一场深刻的自我对话。
评分这本书的叙事节奏,简直是教科书级别的掌控。一开始,我以为它会像很多新人作家那样,急于抛出重磅炸弹,把所有线索一股脑地扔给你。结果呢?作者非常沉得住气。开篇用了大量篇幅描绘一个特定场景——一个看似平平无奇的咖啡馆,里面形形色色的人群,他们之间的对话稀疏而充满了潜台词。我一开始有点不耐烦,觉得这拖沓了,但随着故事的深入,我才明白,这些看似无关紧要的日常片段,其实是为后续情节张开的巨大背景幕布上的关键色块。等到那个转折点到来时,那种冲击力是爆炸性的,因为它不是凭空出现的,而是你已经被不知不觉中培养起来的期待和观察的结果。书中对人物心理活动的描写,也极其细腻,那种“只可意会,不可言传”的微妙情绪,作者总能用精准的文字捕捉到。比如,某个人在撒谎时,手指不自觉蜷缩的角度,或是目光游离时瞳孔微小的放大,这些细微之处,比直接的心理独白更具力量。这让我对“文字的力量”有了全新的认识,它不是用来堆砌辞藻,而是用来雕刻真实。
评分这本书,哎呀,说实话,刚翻开的时候我真有点提心吊胆。封面设计那种深沉的色调,加上那个略显沧桑的字体,立马就给我一种“这可能是一本沉甸甸的历史传记”的预感。我本来期待的是那种快节奏、充满意外反转的都市悬疑小说,所以一开始我还有点担心是不是走错了片场。然而,一旦我沉浸进去,那种担心就烟消云散了。作者构建的世界观非常扎实,每一个角落的细节都像是经过了无数次打磨。你仿佛能闻到老城区石板路上雨后的湿气,感受到那些老建筑墙壁上的粗粝感。主角的行为逻辑,尽管在某些时刻显得异常固执甚至有些“反英雄”,却出奇地真实可信。他不是那种传统意义上完美无缺的英雄,他有弱点,有难以启齿的过去,正是这些瑕疵,让他的人物形象立体得像从你身边走过的一个老邻居。我尤其欣赏作者处理时间线的方式,它不是线性的推进,而是像一张巨大的网,过去的回响不断地在当下激起涟漪,让你不得不停下来思考:我们现在所处的这个时刻,究竟有多少是前人留下的印记?阅读体验就像是在进行一次深度的考古挖掘,每一次翻页都伴随着新的发现,那种满足感,是很少有作品能给予的。
评分 评分 评分 评分 评分本站所有内容均为互联网搜索引擎提供的公开搜索信息,本站不存储任何数据与内容,任何内容与数据均与本站无关,如有需要请联系相关搜索引擎包括但不限于百度,google,bing,sogou 等
© 2026 book.quotespace.org All Rights Reserved. 小美书屋 版权所有