Do the crime, do the time behind bars. But once you've been in, it can be tough to stay out.
When Hinton Helsinger leaves the Youth Correctional Center, he's set on reforming his impulsive ways. But things at home have his dad has been killed, his mom's remarried his uncle, and his uncle is the new kingpin of the family gang that controls the town's drug trade. Threatened by Hinton's return, Hinton's uncle hatches a sinister plot using Hinton's girlfriend, Olivia, as a pawn.
As Hinton struggles between the impulse to avenge his dad's death and the desire to seek a way out of that corrupt life, he embarks on a downward spiral of revenge and madness from which he and those he loves are unlikely to escape. This modern twist on Shakespeare's Hamlet explores the themes of reform, revenge, and self-destruction.
Patrick Jones is the author of five realistic teen novels, most recently Stolen Car((Walker / Bloomsbury, 2008). His first young adult novel Things Change (Walker & Company, 2004) was named by the Young Adult Library Services Association as a best book for reluctant readers, and was runner-up in the Teen Buckeye Book Award selected by Ohio teens. His second novel Nailed was published by Walker / Bloomsbury in spring 2006 and was a runner-up for the Great Lake Book Award. His 2007 novel, Chasing Tail Lights, is nominated for the Minnesota Books Awards. His most recent (and last) professional publication is Connecting with Reluctant Readers (Neal-Schuman, 2006). In 2006, he won lifetime achievement awards from both the Catholic Library Association, and the American Library Association. Jones is a frequent speaker at library conferences, having visited all fifty states, as well as in Canada, Singapore, Australia, and New Zealand. Jones grew up in Flint, Michigan, but now lives in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Read more at his web page www.connectingya.com, including FAQs about Things Change and Nailed (perfect for book reports!). NOTE: After a bruising experience with another author, he's limited his reviews on Good Reads to only raves as not to disturb the "fellowship" of YA writers.
Fight or Flee is a twist on Hamlet, so expect a lot of death. I really enjoyed the story and thought it was done well. The characters were okay. I felt like it was written well and I look forward to reading more books in the series.
Read for work. Not Jones’s best work, I’m sorry to say. The plot works fine as an adaptation of Hamlet but some of the language decisions were puzzling; it was like he couldn’t bring himself to fully commit to modern dialogue.
Hinton (Hamlet) returns from prison to find his world altered. His drug lord father, murdered: his uncle, now the main man and married to Hinton's mom. A move-by-move version of the classic play.
TRIGGER WARNING: morte per avvelenamento, combattimento all'ultimo sangue, suicidio.
Non ho mai studiato l'Amleto, neanche letto se è per questo - se mi sono imbattuta in retelling di Shakespeare, negli ultimi anni è stato soprattutto di Macbeth e quanto è stato memorabile Foul Is Fair di Hannah Capin.
Pertanto, a parte sapere che l'interesse amoroso di Amleto si chiama Ofelia e che la tragedia contiene la famosa battuta "c'è del marcio in Danimarca", di Amleto ero proprio digiuna e prima di iniziare questo twist moderno sono andata a leggermi la trama su Wikipedia.
Che dire?
I nomi vengono cambiati e storpiati, ma non così tanto da non capire chi corrisponde a chi nella tragedia originale - per chi ha appena letto la trama o per chi conosce a menadito la tragedia. Questo storia vuole ambientare la tragedia in epoca attuale e urbana, con tanto di gang rivali che spacciano droga e si litigano il territorio e adolescenti che finiscono in riformatorio e ascoltano musica rap, trap ed elettronica.
Per certi versi, credo che l'abbinamento Amleto/impero criminale funzioni molto bene - dopotutto è una storia famigliare di ambizione e vendetta, di eredità (morale) e di gerarchie di potere.
Già il fatto che l'audiolibro duri poco più di un'ora e mezza dovrebbe però dirvi quanto le cose siano stringate e ridotte all'osso. I dialoghi pure sono quasi mozzati, suonano meccanici e macchinosi e le battute vengono sempre strillate come se fossimo al mercato del pesce - invece del senso di tragedia che dovrebbero trasmettere comunicano un tono melodrammatico da scena isterica e infatti il narratore non mi ha fatta impazzire.
C'è poco background in generale - perché Hinton sia finito in riformatorio è detto solo en passant, non si percepisce nulla di questo grande amore che lo dovrebbe legare ad Olivia, degli affari di famiglia non si sa praticamente nulla, lo zio e nuovo patriarca è ridotto ad una macchietta che non vuole il nipote intorno a prescindere prima ancora che inizi a sospettare che il nipote sappia delle sue nefandezze.
L'ho trovata molto sbrigativa come storia, un po' raffazzonata - ricalca bene la sequenza di eventi e morti dell'Amleto originale, ma manca di pathos e coinvolgimento perché non c'è sviluppo psicologico o indagine interiore. Inoltre, non so se sia un problema del libro in sé oppure del narratore e del modo in cui leggeva, ma la scena cambiava improvvisamente ed erano altri personaggi a parlare, quindi mi ritrovavo spesso confusa a cercare di capire se avessimo cambiato ambiente e dove fossimo e con chi.
Se avete un bel retelling di Amleto da consigliarmi, sono tutta orecchi perché questo direi che è bocciato.
I feel terrible to rate something so low, but this book was not it. The writing was bouncy and jumbled, it felt like the author had no idea how to smoothly transition his line of thought.
It could be a good read for younger readers with short attention spans just trying to get into something. A gateway book perhaps.
When Hinton comes home again after being locked up he wants only to go the straight and narrow.While he was gone his father died(was murdered?)and his mother married his Uncle Clay who took over the family business.So Hinton has a lot on his mind.Everywhere he turns Clay is trying to make life hard for him and in the long run makes him hate him even more.Hinton and his girlfriend Olivia are broken apart because of Clay and that is the last straw for him.When a "safe"fight is set between Latrell and Hinton and it turns deadly (because of Clay)not only the two fighters are lost to us but a bunch more.The rival leaders gang comes in and in the end it is Hinton who gets the honorable mention as his best friend tells the truth.Hinton should've been the boss of the business after Clay but Clay had other ideas and in the end he lost everything.When all of the secrets come out and sides are taken it is violence in this story that takes over.The lesson here is what Hinton wanted -to be just left alone and not to be in the business at all.To move on and forward with the person he loved.
This is a great book for those high school students that are having trouble reading. The story is plot driven and has fast action. A real winner for those hi/lo readers.