New Boy

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Whoever thought that your schooldays were the best days of your life should read this. It portrays playground politics set in one school day. The ending took my breath away.
The one thing we all took from this book was that we all felt the ages of the children was too young given what they're all doing. It made us feel quite uncomfortable to read what they were doing when we realised the ages of the children involved. They seemed to be doing some very adult things in terms of being so deceitful, we felt that it wasn't within their grasp to be able to do these things. If the children had been just a few years older this could have been a much better book just from that point. Obviously...
Read more...I read this book in its own right, without prior knowledge that it was a modern rewriting of Othello. I thought that the characters and situations were well drawn, however I had a slight problem with the ages and apparent awareness of the children involved. Despite this, I found the book very readable, and feel that it would make the works of Shakespeare more appealing and accessible to younger readers.
I really enjoyed this book ... I had no previous experience of Othello, but this is definitely well worth a read and would be suitable for a teen audience.
Osei is the son of a diplomat and is starting yet another first day at a new school, this time in 1970s Washington. He has done this many times before and has developed strategies to cope with being a lone black child in an all-white schoolyard. The book chronicles the events surrounding this first day in his new school. By the time the school day ends, nobody who was there will ever be quite the same again. Extraordinary. Just one day, but what a book. I cannot find the words to express its brilliance. More of a novella than a novel,...
Read more...My U3A Reading Group was delighted to receive this book; most members had read something by Tracy Chevalier and looked forward to reading 'New Boy'. It is rare that we are unanimous in our views but this was the rare occasion. No - one liked this book. The sexualisation of 11 year olds made people uncomfortable. This and the language used, especially for the 1970s, was not believable. What 11 year old would say any of the following? - Page 33 'it seemed to O that she was lit from within by something most kids either did not have...
Read more...I'm afraid this book wasn't for me. After enjoying " Girl with a Pearl Earring " so much I was very disappointed. I'm almost 70 and wonder if the book was intended for a much younger audience, perhaps even middle to late teens. The language and style used were simplistic and I found the plot slow. Being unfamiliar with the American school system I was unsure of the ages of the pupils in the story. Having asked a friend who was having the same problem , we decided from their actions and attitudes to place...
Read more...An enjoyable light read showing the difficulties of growing up in a society when an outcast arrives to alter the balance of friendships. Left hanging at the end to come to different conclusions. How times have changed (hopefully) from the early 1970s where race and colour were more difficult to accept.
There follows three reviews by members of BiblioBellesWI. We received free copies in advance of us reviewing but these reviews are not influenced by that. New Boy by Tracy Chevalier reviewed by KathyL of BiblioBelles As a massive fan of Jo Nesbo, I was intrigued to learn that he was rewriting Macbeth as a modern novel. Then I found out about the Hogarth Shakespeare Project, which I surely must have learned of in years gone by but forgotten about! It was through that I learned about TC’s rewriting of Othello as a modern novel. Around the same time, I saw...
Read more...This is a book about an 11-year-old boy named Osei from Ghana. His father is a diplomat and the story takes place in the 1970s in Washington, DC. Everything happens over one day, the first day in a new school for Osei. With a month to go in the school year, all the children are well established with their friend, lunch groups, sports hierarchy, etc, and Osei, the only black child in the school, is thrown into this mix. I found this book a tense, uneasy read, waiting for the tragedy that you know will happen to happen. It is indeed...
Read more...Why rework Shakespeare? I enjoyed this short book, up to a point. The playground drama works well and Chevalier draws the characters excellently. I do wonder why the author chooses to set this schoolyard drama in Washington D.C. in the 1970s. Are sixth grade students aged 15 as the TLS reviewer suggests? Yes, I do feel that I am perhaps being overly critical and felt the playground situations were well handled but the sexual relationships did not resonate with me as being in keeping with sixth graders. This book provoked much discussion and would be an great addition...
Read more...We received copies of this book from the noticeboard and as many of our group were familiar with Tracy's other works we where intrigued to see what this was like. For some it wasn't what they were expecting but all enjoyed it and it led to lots of lively discussion. We liked the setting and could identify with the characters drawing from our own and children's experiences of school ground politics. We decided it would be a great way to engage teenagers in some difficult subject areas such as race discrimination, jealously and relationships. We can highly recommend it as a...
Read more...This is another in the project where well known authors retell one of Shakespeare's plays, in this case Othello, although it wouldn't matter whether the reader was familiar with the Shakespeare version or not. I've read all of Tracy Chevalier's novels and was really looking forward to reading this one, too, and although I enjoyed it I found it much less convincing than any of her other work. It's a disappointingly short, easy read that seems to focus on following Shakespeare's plotline at the expense of developing the themes and characters and making it more her own. That said, it's...
Read more...I was unsure of the time setting for this story and the intended age of the audience. It would have been better if the reviewers' references to Iago had been omitted since the plot line of the story is given away almost from the beginning. We know how the plot is going to unfold, what Ian is going to do. This is a short read, uncomplicated, predictable. Quite unfairly I found the Americanisms throughout the text irritating: 'gotten' was used many times. This is a tale of racial prejudice, small town mentality, bigotry: the characters...
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