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Most helpful customer reviews
1.0 out of 5 stars
Slamming Slam,
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This review is from: Slam (Paperback)
Fresh off A Longway Down - my favorite Hornby experience - I dipped into Slam expecting much of the same. What I got however was a jejune novel written for the adolescent, skateboarding kid who spends his/her time trying to learn crooked-grinds on their neighborhood curbs and on their Xbox, rather than reading. And if Slam is for them, I can't blame them for replacing books with an Xbox.
4.0 out of 5 stars
Nicely done,
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This review is from: Slam (Paperback)
Slam is Nick Hornby's most recent book. And although the target audience is youth (or at least it is it the Youth Fiction section of my local library) I enjoyed this book. Nick Hornby writes about a sensitive subject with humour and a realistic approach. In typical Nick Hornby fashion, he does this by talking about things people can relate to. Like music by Green Day. Or Tony Hawk. Or skateboarding. And of course he manages to do so without coming across all preachy.The protagonist in the story is Sam. A 15 year old who like skating, listening to music, and hanging out with his friends. Along the way Sam gets a girlfriend and he ends up getting her pregnant. From there the story progresses as Sam learns to cope with the idea/notion of being a Dad a 16. However not only does Sam need to concern himself with being a Dad, but so does his mother and his girlfriend's parents. In summary, Nick Hornby does a good job of talking about what goes through one's mind and how, at the age of 15/16, someone would deal with it. I think this book should be recommended reading in all schools. Nicely done.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Funny, touching, tragic, magical,
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This review is from: Slam (Paperback)
This novel was a pleasant departure from Horby's usual genre, but one in which he is particularly adept, that of the man-boy stuck in adolescence. In SLAM we find Sam, a 15 year old adolescent skateboarder who finds himself confronting the prospect of fatherhood sooner than he would have hoped.The genius in this story though, in my opinion, was the hagiographic portrayal of professional skateboarder Tony Hawk (TH) and his autobiography, as messiah and bible respectively. The short life histories being related by TH to Sam through the autobiography formed the equivalent of new testament parables to Sam through which he would seek meaning, in the same way that Christians seek guidance through their interpretation of scripture. The altar for his religion, skating, was a poster of TH in his bedroom to which he would seek guidance from his messiah. The magical aspects of the story, the result of intervention by TH, transported him into a future he knew nothing about, on the first visit at least. Sam's reaction to this future was dealt with deftly by the author, and resulted in some remarkably touching scenes, some sad, some hilarious, some tragic. If you like Nick Hornby, you will enjoy this story. In my opinion, one of his best.
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