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Lockdown [Englisch] [Taschenbuch]

Walter Dean Myers
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Produktinformation

  • Taschenbuch: 272 Seiten
  • Verlag: Amistad; Auflage: Reprint (27. Dezember 2011)
  • Sprache: Englisch
  • ISBN-10: 0061214825
  • ISBN-13: 978-0061214820
  • Vom Hersteller empfohlenes Alter: Ab 13 Jahren
  • Größe und/oder Gewicht: 18 x 12,7 x 1,8 cm
  • Durchschnittliche Kundenbewertung: 5.0 von 5 Sternen  Alle Rezensionen anzeigen (1 Kundenrezension)
  • Amazon Bestseller-Rang: Nr. 151.617 in Englische Bücher (Siehe Top 100 in Englische Bücher)

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Walter Dean Myers
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Produktbeschreibungen

Pressestimmen

“A moving tale of a kid who may have made a mistake but who still deserves the modest future he seeks. Refreshingly avoids cliché.” (Bulletin of the Center for Children’s Books (starred review) )

“Masterful.” (Kirkus Reviews )

“Myers creates a nuanced, realistic portrait of a teen dealing with incarceration and violence. Myers gets his voice just right.” (Voice of Youth Advocates (VOYA) )

Kurzbeschreibung

Walter Dean Myers enjoys speaking with kids in schools and juvenile detention facilities about writing and making positive decisions. He says, "I have enormous faith in young people."

What's it like in juvie jail? Enter the world of fourteen-year-old Reese, who's locked up at Progress juvenile detention facility. Can he get a second chance?


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As far as Reese is concerned, Progress Center is just a fancy name for juvie jail, and he's been there long enough to know. He was found guilty of stealing prescription pads from a doctor and selling them to a drug dealer. It wasn't easy to stay out of trouble on the street, and it's not much easier inside, either.

The only person Reese trusts at Progress Center is Play. Diego, Leon, and Toon may hang with him, but they have their own agendas. It doesn't take long to find out the new guy they call King Kong is bad news, too.

When he's not in school with the other guys or getting his quarters ready for inspection, Reese is part of a new work program. He is cuffed and transported to a local nursing home where he helps out with cleaning and interacting with one of the residents. Mr. Hooft, a scrawny old guy in his seventies, calls Reese a criminal, and whenever he gets a chance he tells people he's a murderer. Despite his gruff exterior, Mr. Hooft shares his life story and offers Reese some life-changing advice.

Reese experiences several setbacks when he punches the new guy for picking on Toon, and when detectives haul him in for questioning on additional charges they hope to pin on him, which would add years to his lockup time. His only motivation is a little sister named Icy, whose faith in Reese never wavers.

True to his hard-hitting, gritty style, Walter Dean Myers gives his readers an inside look into juvenile detention. He reinforces the cold, hard facts of life that in the neighborhoods create the tough situations that tempt kids like Reese and lead to a life of crime. He doesn't sugarcoat life inside the detention center. Readers see it for what it is and the destructive atmosphere that often hardens kids like Reese instead of rehabilitating them. LOCKDOWN is an honest look at a side of life that might change the choices of some young readers.

Reviewed by: Sally Kruger, aka "Readingjunky"
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one of the most vivid and real voices I have come across in Young Adult literature 31. Mai 2010
Von YAHighway(dot)com - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Gebundene Ausgabe
Lockdown, the newest release from Printz award-winning author Walter Dean Myers, couldn't have come at a better time. Burned out from a succession of novels that each read much like the one before it, lacking voice and pizazz, Lockdown provided a much needed - and much appreciated - change. This journey into the life of a boy who made a mistake and pays for it over and over again is both beautiful and sorrowful.

Reese is a boy you've known: someone who tries his best to stay out of trouble when the story of his life is trouble. A big brother in and out of prison, an addict mom, a microcosm society of hopelessness, this is what Reese grows up with and when that fateful day comes that he makes his own mistake and is sent to juvie, no one's going to let him forget where he comes from - and what little he has to look forward to.

Reese has all kinds of obstacles to navigate at the Progress Center: physical violence, authority figures who alternately beat him down and maintain unrealistic high expectations of him, a crusty old racist in the retirement home he volunteers at, uncertainty about his future when he gets out. But Reese, despite his mistake, is self-aware and concerned for others. But even that gets him into trouble. How do you rescue a smaller kid from getting jumped when one more fight cancels out your early-release?

I was struck and saddened by the way the disciplinary system in Lockdown worked to damage Reese's character rather than heal it because it was so truthfully portrayed. Even so, Reese shines in his interactions with his sister, Icy, and I found myself hoping against fate that good things would happen for him. His optimism under pressure was inspiring.

Walter Dean Myers has one of the most vivid and real voices I have come across in Young Adult literature. I'd like to repeat that sentence three or four times, but I won't. He doesn't rely on dialect or slang to illustrate his setting and characters; instead, there is a natural rhythm to the narration and the dialogue that compelled me into the story, into the time and place and understanding of Reese's world. And yet, it feels subtle, not at all forceful or in-your-face. Myers is a master storyteller and Reese's tale shines under his treatment.

~review by YA Highway, [...]
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Award-worthy literature 29. Dezember 2010
Von Kathleen B. Mcdade - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
I had never read anything by Walter Dean Myers before, despite his award-winning status, so I really had no idea what to expect from Lockdown.

This book took me into another world, but not a fantasy, sci-fi, or dystopian post-apocalyptic world. It's the world of a juvenile detention center, and a world where violence, drug use and drug-dealing are common. And yes, it is also a world of mostly non-white people.

The blurb says "Lockdown explores an unlikely friendship between fourteen-year-old Progress inmate Reese and a man he meets through his work program at a local senior citizens' home. " However, this is only part of the story. Myers shows us the violence inside the detention center, the cluelessness, cynicism, and cruelty of several adults there, and the cycle that keeps so many detainees coming back into the prison system.

Reese matures in this book, but at a reasonable pace. He starts figuring out what he needs to do to stay straight on the outside, but he doesn't have it all together by the end of the book. And he makes plenty of mistakes throughout.

Interestingly, the adults in the book grow, too. Mr. Hooft at the senior citizens' home at first fears Reese, because he is African American and an inmate, but learns to accept him and perhaps call him friend. Mr. Pugh, a guard, is a bully at first, but becomes friendlier later. And other adults who seem to think there's no hope for Reese begin to come around, too. I think this adds a lot to the book.

Lockdown is rich with detail and action. When I finished reading it, I actually went straight back to the beginning and read the first few chapters over again, because I felt like I hadn't gotten everything out of them the first time. If I didn't have several more books to read, I might have read it straight through again!

I think this book might be a keeper -- I'd like to read it again and get to know it better. Definitely award-worthy.
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WDM doesn't disappoint! 12. Juni 2010
Von Kelly Jensen (STACKED Books blog) - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Gebundene Ausgabe
Reese is living in Promises -- a juvenile detention facility -- for committing the crime of stealing prescription pads from doctors and aided in the acquisition of drug deals. Since he's been a good inmate, he's given the opportunity to take a part-time job at Evergreen, which is a home for the elderly. The job is a privilege and gives him both freedom from his place in jail, and it is meant to teach him responsibility, obedience, and respect for himself and others. It is here he meets Mr. Hooft, an elderly gentleman who has a tremendous impact on Reese's beliefs about who he is and who he can become.

Of course, it's not that simple. About half way through the story, there is a big bomb dropped upon Reese, who has been getting himself in trouble trying to defend some of his buddies. When this arises, it is Reese who must decide what is important to him and how he can get himself out of Promises into a fulfilling life for himself and Icy -- the sister he adores.

Lockdown was exceptionally well written, and the character development kept me wanting more. Although this won't rank as one of my favorite reads, primarily because it focused on a topic I'm unfamiliar with and don't typically seek out, this is a book that has definite appeal to many audiences.

One of the real challenges I had was with the secondary characters: I could not distinguish among the various juvenile inmates nor the adults in Reese's life. I found that Reese himself was very well developed, and his sister Icy had a unique and memorable voice. Likewise, Mr. Hooft kept me coming back as a reader, as I felt the story he told Reese about his time in and immediately after the Vietnam War drew great parallels to Reese's own challenges with keeping on the right side of the law.

Myers writes to impart a lesson, but I felt throughout the entirety of Lockdown that I was not bring preached at. I'm not the real audience for this title, but even the target group will not feel they're being told how to be or act. Instead, the lessons are weaved well enough into action and actual story telling that they feel part of the plot rather than the entire plot itself.

If you're looking for a book for a boy who lives on the fringes, has found himself in trouble before, or seems generally lost, this is an excellent choice. Likewise, this is a book that will appeal to both boys and girls and would make a perfect discussion title. Myers has certainly carved himself a niche in the young adult world, and he will have staying power.
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