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Nothing But the Truth
 
 

Nothing But the Truth (Hardcover)

by Avi (Author) "Coach Jamison saw me in the hall and said he wanted to make sure I'm trying out for the track team!!!! ..." (more)
3.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (447 customer reviews)

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Product Description

From Publishers Weekly

Structured as a series of journal entries, memos, letters and dialogues, this highly original novel emerges as a witty satire of high school politics, revealing how truth can easily become distorted. After Philip Malloy, a clownish, rather unmotivated freshman, is punished for causing a disturbance (humming "The Star Spangled Banner"), facts about the incident become exaggerated until a minor school infraction turns into a national scandal. Philip's parents, several reporters and a neighbor (who happens to be running for the school board) accuse the school of being unpatriotic. Philip gains fame as a martyr for freedom; his homeroom teacher, Miss Narwin, however, faces dismissal from her job. After gleaning the points of view of many characters, readers will side with Miss Narwin and will recognize the hollowness of Philip's eventual victory. It is clear that Avi ( The True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle ) is attuned to the modern high school scene. With frankness and remarkable insight, he conveys the flaws of the system while creating a story that is both entertaining and profound. Ages 11-up.
Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an alternate Hardcover edition.

From School Library Journal

Grade 6-9-- Ninth grader Philip Malloy finds himself unable to participate on the track team because of his failing grade in English. Convinced the teacher, Margaret Narwin, dislikes him, he concocts a scheme to get transferred from her homeroom: instead of standing "at respectful, silent attention" during the national anthem, Philip hums. Throughout the ensuing disciplinary problems at school, his parents take his side, ignore the fact that he is breaking a school rule, and concentrate on issues of patriotism. The conflict between Philip and his school escalates, and he quickly finds the situation out of his control; local community leaders, as well as the national news media, become involved. At this point, the novel surges forward to a heartbreaking, but totally believable, conclusion. Avi carefully sets forth the events in the story, advancing the plot through conversations between students, Philip's parents, school personnel, and community politicians, while Philip's point of view is revealed through his diary entries, and Margaret Narwin's through letters to her sister. Also enriching the narrative are copies of school memos and newspaper articles, transcripts of speeches delivered, and copies of letters received by both Philip and his teacher; each document provides another perspective on the conflict and illuminates the many themes that beg to be discussed--most notably the irony of lives destroyed because of the misuse of power and the failure of people to communicate. Admirably well crafted and thought provoking. --Ellen Fader, Westport Public Library, CT
Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an alternate Hardcover edition.

Inside This Book (Learn More)
First Sentence
Coach Jamison saw me in the hall and said he wanted to make sure I'm trying out for the track team!!!! Read the first page
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Front Cover | Copyright | Excerpt | Back Cover
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Customer Reviews

447 Reviews
5 star:
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4 star:
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3 star:
 (108)
2 star:
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1 star:
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Average Customer Review
3.4 out of 5 stars (447 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5.0 out of 5 stars A very important lesson, July 12 2004
By Jake Krauss (New Jersey) - See all my reviews
I find the title "Nothing but the Truth" to be cleverly ironic, as this book actually demonstrates a minor dispute's descent into a political arena where "Anything but the Truth" would more acurately describe the situation. Some reviewers have claimed that this book is repetative. It is true that readers are presented with information over and over again, but it is never quite the same. The purpose is to show how the story gets twisted each time it's re-told. How the same event comes to be described in two incredibly different ways, neither of which is accurate, depending on what each side has to gain or lose. In the huge mess that's created, no one knows the true story anymore. More importantly, no one cares.

That is the heart of the story. The school at first only cares about Phillip disobeying (That's his real crime: disobeying an arbitrary rule. Not humming.) and then only about covering their own butts by making it sound like Phillip deserved his harsh punishment by making up a fake crime so no one will find out that his only 'crime' was refusing to mindlessly conform. Phillip and his parents at first only care about defending him against a tyrannical bureaucracy, but later his father also cares about pumping himself up by making false claims of Phillip's virtue in to counter the false claims of his depravity. Everyone else latches onto one of the false claims, seeing Phillip as saint or sinner. From the beginning, no one cares about the truth.

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3.0 out of 5 stars Boring Most of the Time, July 6 2004
By John (Florida) - See all my reviews
First off let me tell you this is a documentary novel that has documents, notes files, etc. that are sometimes are really boring. The dialogue is in play form, so my calss acted it out. It's hard to follow. But it's funny and if your a teen you can relate somewhat. This was an unrealistic book, as you will see in the following text:

Now this book wasn't so bad, but I was reading it with my class. We were acting out the different parts. This made it MUCH easier to follow. Otherwise you'll start to think about whether you left the coffe-pot on or something and have to reread a page.

Philip Malloy is a young boy who hums along with the Star Spangeled Banner. His teacher, that he hates for giving bad grades (Which he deserves), sends him to the principal's office for "singing", so she says, the SSB. Philip is a big crybaby about ho he gets bad grades and is kicked off the track team. No one would really send a kid to the Principals Office for humming the SSB. And it wouldn't make national news, which does infact happen. I was wondering what the point was of this book until the last page... which was a funny, yet annoying ending, leaving you feeling unfinished with the story and wanting to look for the next page. There is none, which made me mad.

Yet, this book was interesting nonetheless and a quick, easy-read. Check it out at the library BEFORE you buy it... if you even wanna read it again...

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4.0 out of 5 stars Nothing but the Truth, May 21 2004
Chris Skorusa

Nothing but the Truth

Reading II

Summary

Was there ever a day you woke up and thought it was going to be a good day but it wasn't? From That one day your whole week has changed it seamed like it could never get better. Nothing but the Truth is like it. The book is manly about a student named Philip Malloy. Philip is a Freshman at Harrison High. The first couple days of school were fine but there was this one teacher named Mss.Narwin. Philip didn't really like her. He wasn't doing too good in the class either he was getting a "D". With the D he wasn't able to try out for track just because he was failing this class. But it didn't get any better he got a memo telling him that his homeroom is switched to Mss.Narwin. That wasn't the smartest thing putting Phillip and Mss.Narwin together. While Philip was in the class he was suspended for humming to the announcements. With the suspension he has received Philip will be getting a lot of people mad.
Response: I thought this book was very interesting there was always something going wrong. I can tell that the author of book must have spent a lot of time making this book. The book is written in dialogue from so you always know who is talking. There are also parts where you get to read Philip's diary and really get to know what Philip is thinking and what his emotions are. This book is really good at giving you a mental image of the story. There were some parts of the book that made me mad. Like how mad the teacher got just for humming and that everyone turned on him for not doing anything? But at the end of the book it all makes sense. I would rate this book 8 out of 10. Just because there was some situations that I don't think could really happened in life. But everything else was good.

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Most recent customer reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Nothing But The Truth
Nothing But the Truth has like the weirdest ending, don't you just hate that? Sometimes it would seem like it's going to be either funny or something your just not going to get... Read more
Published on May 21 2004 by Dan C.

4.0 out of 5 stars Read All About It
Suspended for Patioism
A high school student gets suspended for singing the National Anthem during the morning announcements. Read more
Published on May 20 2004 by Anna K

4.0 out of 5 stars Nothing But The Truth
Summary
Have you ever read a novel that was written in documentary format? In the book Nothing but the Truth it had the twist and turns like all stories. Read more
Published on May 20 2004 by Tater

5.0 out of 5 stars Summary for Nothing but the Truth
Summary for Nothing but the Truth
Summary: -Did you ever have a weird ending for a book and you got mad because the book was really good but the ending was weird? Read more
Published on May 19 2004 by Thomas

4.0 out of 5 stars good book
The book Nothing but the Truth is a bout a boy (Phil) and a dispute with one of his teachers (Miss Narwin). Read more
Published on May 14 2004 by cuda1214

3.0 out of 5 stars Weird book
Nothing but the truth was such a stupid book. EVERYONE sounded the same in this book. I don't really get this booki at all. Read more
Published on May 13 2004

3.0 out of 5 stars An Interesting Plot
Nothing But the Truth was a very interesting book. The plot was one that i have never read before. The book does not seem like something that would happen in real life, but... Read more
Published on April 19 2004 by pintopeanutz

3.0 out of 5 stars My Review
Plot
The plot was not clear at the beginning of the book, there was too little information to understand what was going on. Read more
Published on April 14 2004 by Ruth Ramirez

3.0 out of 5 stars Nothing but the Truth
The plot is very believable, as this story happens in real life all the time. The story could start a little sooner, and some of the subplots are irrelevant and just confuse you... Read more
Published on April 14 2004

2.0 out of 5 stars lessons learned
In the book Nothing But The Truth there is a boy named Philp Malloy he really wants to be on the track team but he has a D in his english class. Read more
Published on April 13 2004

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