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Most helpful customer reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
A BRILLIANT, BRILLIANT BOOK!!!,
By Buecherwurm Friedchen (Upstate, New York) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Revolution (Hardcover)
Once upon a time a book comes along that gives you everything.REVOLUTION IS JUST SUCH A BOOK!! Jennifer Donnelly invented a whole new genre for REVOLUTION. You sympathize with Andi - a very cool and smart teenager living in Brooklyn, heartbroken and despaired, mourning the loss of her young brother. Dealing with her depressed mother and the absence of her father, Andi finds relief from her pain only in her music. Her teachers call her gifted, a genius, but she neglects her studies and is on the verge of being expelled from the prestigious private school she attends in Brooklyn. Her father, a world renowned geneticist insits that she accompany him to Paris, where he is to conduct tests on a tiny, shrivelled heart. Whilst there, Andi meets Virgil, a hot French/Tunisan musician who slowly, very slowly finds a way to her heart. Andi also discovers a diary hidden in an ancient guitar case, written by Alexandrine, a young street acort who lived during the French Revolution. Now an amazing turn of events takes place, to be discovered by the readers.........
5.0 out of 5 stars
Courtesy of Teens Read Too,
By TeensReadToo "Eat. Drink. Read. Be Merrier." (All Over the US & Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Revolution (Hardcover)
Gold Star Award Winner!Andi Alpers is angry. Angry at her father for abandoning their family; angry at her mother who can't seem to keep it together; angry at herself for being the one who let it get to this point. Andi is imploding - all because she thinks she let her younger brother, Truman, die. Her social life is non-existent, her grades are slipping into oblivion, and she has almost given up on the one thing that she truly loves the most, music. Grief-stricken, Andi is on the verge of being expelled from the prestigious school she attends. Because of this, Andi's father intervenes and whisks her away to Paris where he is working on a ground-breaking project. Andi has absolutely no idea how much Paris, its history, and her father's project will change her life......for the better. Jennifer Donnelly has done an exceptional job of intertwining historical fact with a contemporary tale. Andi is thrust into the life of Alexandrine Paradis, a girl who lived during the time of Marie Antoinette and the French Revolution. Andi feels a connection with Alexandrine while reading her diary. Alexandrine's words resonate within her, slowly turning her naïve fascination into obsession. Much like A NORTHERN LIGHT, this story will grip you from the very beginning and not let go until the last page is turned. I highly recommend this novel. It is truly an excellent story. Reviewed by: LadyJay
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta) Amazon.com:
4.4 out of 5 stars (149 customer reviews) 44 of 50 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
There Are All Kinds of Revolutions,
By Tamela Mccann "taminator40" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Revolution (Hardcover)
Pre-release customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program
In Jennifer Donnelly's exquisite new young adult book, Revolution, there's a juxtaposition of two young lives, lived two hundred years apart, and the idea and reality of Revolution. In modern times, Andi Alpers is a high school senior at the exclusive New York school St. Anselm's, and while her life should be one of ease and comfort, she's haunted by the sudden, tragic death of her younger brother Truman two years before. During the French revolution, Alexandrine Paradis is a teen whose very life depends upon her ability to be a convincing actress and spy. Brought together by Alex's diary, the two young women are on different paths to self-discovery, yet neither one may survive.Andi's a tragic figure in many ways, and her story isn't a pretty one. Never very close to her father, a Nobel Prize winning scientist, the death of Truman drives a wedge further into their relationship, particularly once he leaves Andi and her mother for good. Andi's mother retreats into a cloud of painting and depression until Andi's father is forced to place her into a mental institution; her pain is echoed in Andi, who also finds that popping prescription anti-depressants numbs her to the guilt she feels over Truman. In a life filled with drugs and soul-rending pain, Andi considers repeatedly taking her own life; the only force of good she feels is when she can retreat into music. It is this force that draws her to Virgil, a young man she meets when she's forced by her father to go to Paris with him while her mother is institutionalized. It is there that she finds Alex's diary, and her journey back in time begins. There is so much to this story, so many layers revealed, often slowly; yet getting inside Andi's mind is difficult because she puts up defenses that make it hard even for the reader to get close to her. The adults in her life have let her down so often that there is no hope for her there, and yet she's isolated herself from almost everyone in order to squelch the pain she feels over Truman. When Virgil appears and offers her something to hold on to, it almost makes you want to scream at her to grab him and never let go, yet Andi's tenuous hold on life is so fragile it seems possible that she will not make it. It is only as she loses herself in the pages of Alex's diary that she can discover what it is she needs to do in order to make peace with her losses. Donnelly's writing is rich and full of depth, and the parallel lives of these two young women are both equally engaging. There is so much feeling among the pages, and Andi's self-destructive behavior makes your heart hurt as you are forced to experience her life. Donnelly weaves history effortlessly into the story, and I was particularly impressed with her grasp of historical music. The voices of Andi and Alex are going to be with me a very long time and I cannot recommend this one highly enough. Jennifer Donnelly, your writing never lets me down. Five plus stars. 12 of 13 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
"I will not last much longer...",
By Mr. August "Literature lover" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Revolution (Hardcover)
Pre-release customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program
What I thought would be a rather trite novel of two teens with evolving emotions divided by 200 years, this book was anything but commonplace. I was surprised by the intensity and originality of the author's melding of societies and out-sized passions.Ms. Donnelly demonstrates respect for the intellect of young women. From the articulate first chapter where she describes Andi Alpers, who is not always lucid, to the final sentence, I was impressed with Andi's perception of her peers and her own insurmountable grief. Despite her haunting sorrow and guilt, she holds on to her astuteness and ability to learn. A gifted musician, Andi is suffering from the loss of her younger brother, her guilt has sent her in a tailspin of drugs and self-loathing. Donnelly captures Andi in the first few chapters and the readers are aware they are dealing with a brilliant, 17-year-old girl who is on edge of suicide and appears to be floating from minute to minute in agony. She reaches out to her mother, an artist, who cannot overcome the death of her son, Truman, and placates her with kindness and gifts. Her father, a successful Nobel Prize winning geneticist, sends her mother to a mental hospital and takes Andi to Paris. Placing her mother in a mental hospital is an affront to Andi and she fights her father for her mother's dignity. One of my favorite lines occurs when Andi corrects Dr, Becker (the hospital's psychiatrist) grammar and usage. Her father has his rules: she is to work on her thesis to graduate from her elite school by creating a plausible outline and plan in order to graduate. So how can Andi use her brilliance to overcome her grief and re-enter the world? Her father drags her to Paris where he is working on a secret project and the story begins. Finding a diary, presumably written by another young woman stowed in a guitar case, we are introduced to Alexandrine Paradis, also a 17-year-old girl, who becomes the servant to Marie Antoinette and Louis XVI by entertaining their young son, Louis Charles (dauphin). Donnelly hits the reader every which way as she takes us through the French Revolution. As in all revolutions, no one is a winner; the winners often become more violent and greedy than those they replaced. But Donnelly adds more spin to this history by giving the reader a tactile and olfactory sense of the times. As Alex (and Andi) attempt to survive during the 1790's, Donnelly's writing is so sharp, I can smell the sweat and grime on the peasants, the powdered wigs on the upper classes and the blood pouring off the guillotines. In addition to blending two stories of desperate young women, she presents the French Revolution for what it was, the hungry remained hungry, good and bad citizens were slaughtered and the quest for food and lodging was always a premium for the masses. Andi and Alex were entertainers. Andi's scholarship was never glossed over and neither was Alex's mission to impart a lasting remembrance for 10-year-old Louis Charles. Locked away in the Temple Prison, it is said that he received no care, no human contact and withered away. There are multiple journeys in this novel and they are all difficult. Andi, consumed by guilt, needs to replenish her reason to live and Alex, consumed to do the right thing, becomes another martyr. Secondary characters are all well crafted. Andi's best friend, Vijay, is a clever, brilliant young man, whose mother, Mrs. Gupta could rival six Jewish mothers who want their sons to go to Harvard. And Alex's family, who may love each other, but must spend every waking moment trying to survive, could live in any era. Andi and Alex are artists, one a musician and the other an actress. Their talents served them well, in whatever century they existed. This is a unique, well- researched novel (check out the bibliography), which I recommend highly. 10 of 11 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars
Gulped this down in one sitting...,
By Ryan Kelley "Professional Shark Tamer" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Revolution (Hardcover)
Pre-release customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program
Andi and Alexandrine have a lot in common. They are both musicians. They have trouble relating to their parents. They are both suffering from the loss of someone they love. What the two DON'T have in common: Andi lives in 21st century Brooklyn; Alex lived through the French Revolution and served the doomed King and Queen (Marie Antoinette).When she discovers Alex's diary while visiting Paris over Christmas break, Andi is in a very gloomy, dark place. She still blames herself for her brother's death two years earlier, her parents are divorced, and she's failing out of her upper class private school just when she should be looking into a college. She soon becomes completely absorbed by Alex's diary, which helps her put her own grief into perspective. Overall I enjoyed the story and the characters very much. While this novel isn't going to be for everyone I think the audience it's intended for will eat it up. I really enjoyed it, it was a fun and satisfying read. |
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