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Paperback 33 Snowfish Book

ISBN: 0763629170

ISBN13: 9780763629175

33 Snowfish

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Recommended

Format: Paperback

Condition: Good

$9.19
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Book Overview

Adam Rapp's brilliant and haunting story will break your heart. But then his words will mend it. . . . Absolutely unforgettable. -- Michael Cart

On the run in a stolen car with a kidnapped baby in tow, Custis, Curl, and Boobie are three young people with deeply troubled pasts and bleak futures. As they struggle to find a new life for themselves, it becomes painfully clear that none of them will ever be able to leave the past behind...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Great in its reality

I had read another of Adams Rapp's book and loved it. His style of writing is completely realistic, allowing you to hear the story from the characters themselves. He doesn't sugar coat it and picks topics that are complete depressing but in a weird warped way gives you a happy ending. He brings out the dark humor in the most horrific events and shows you the raw material of peoples personalities. No matter how racist, dirty, perverted, or crazy. The language in the book could be extreme for you if you are under 13, but the language has a purpose in reviling things about the characters. I really enjoyed it, it is now one of my favorites, and you should read it.

Courtesy of Teens Read Too

Author and playwright Adam Rapp has created a masterful tale of woe in 33 SNOWFISH. With all of the trappings of "high literature" (there are stream-of-consciousness passages and multiple narrators), the author transcends the Problem Novel genre in this homage to Faulkner's As I Lay Dying. Like many of Faulkner's novels, 33 SNOWFISH depicts society's lowest, common denominator while somehow managing to make these characters three-dimensional and fairly sympathetic. They are at once repulsive and pitiful; the reader is drawn into their lives much like commuters passing by a car wreck. One cannot help but look or want to lend a hand. This is the story of Custis, Curl, and Boobie, two teen runaways and one pre-teen. Each has a myriad of issues and a litany of anti-social behaviors that include pyromania, murder, prostitution, robbery, kidnapping, and weapon possession. We are dragged along on their ill-fated journey, where we learn about their past while watching them in the disastrous present. That the author finds a way to redeem one of the characters by the end of the story is a remarkable and credible feat. Many reviewers issue a disclaimer about 33 SNOWFISH due to the lives of kids on the street being so graphically and dispassionately outlined. There are many adult themes and some profanity. This book is not for the squeamish. But neither is it a trite, formulaic, sensationalistic bombshell; every word, every paragraph, and every page is essential to the journey of these characters, even though only one meets an end that is appealing. Rapp is to be commended for not "dumbing down" a story of the street for a wider readership. Many other young adult novels have a didactic message that is cumbersome and cliché, sounding a warning as loud as a tuba, leaving nothing for the reader to reflect upon. But 33 SNOWFISH is that rare book that is art for the sake of art, that makes the reader think for the message, that makes its audience reach for the gift of understanding, and the novel does it without wasting any words or pages. Faulkner's fans and his detractors will appreciate this novel, as will young adult readers. Highly recommended. Reviewed by: Mark Frye, author and reviewer

The Dark Survivors at Society's Fringes

Adam Rapp has written another crisp one. It's the language, especially, that grips you and makes you eat your tears and laughter. From the first line -- "On top of everything else, Boobie's got the clap." -- I found myself devouring each next line in search of a gem. Here are a few: "That hat of his was so orange it looked like it would have vitamin C in the flaps." "There was so much blood on Boobie's shirt you could smell the metal in it, and it wasn't coming from the baby, because the baby was cleaner than a Christmas card." "Boobie just stopped and stood there for a minute and looked up at the sky, which was so black it was like God burnt it." "It's like there ain't no real life inside a place if you don't got no table." "The sun was getting weak and everything was starting to look like metal." Boobie, Custis, and Curl are painted with the freshest of brushes and rarest of strokes. What's particularly amazing is the way everything in this depraved world feels so cool and clean through Custis' eyes. Even though they're on the run from the police because of what Boobie did to his parents and are looking for a rich family to sell Boobie's baby brother to, he holds out hope that his gat, the Skylark, and Curl's trick money are somehow going to hold their lives together. This novel "wasn't sad like tears are sad. It's sad like the weather is sad when you think it's spring but then one of those cold rains comes." While we don't usually get to experience the lives of the dark survivors at society's fringes, 33 SNOWFISH is Adam Rapp's way of showing us ourselves in the souls of the broken. It's clear that the more worries the heart has, the smaller and dimmer it gets, and that it might get snuffed out if not given the right amount of hope at just the right time. Reviewed by Jonathan Stephens

33 Snowfish

33 Snowfish is the story of a young boy Custis. His age is never definately set, but he is probably 11 or 12. He grew up with an abusive "owner" Bob Motley and now is on the road with Boobie, a seventeen year old who killed his parents, Curl, Boobie's girlfriend and a drug addicted hooker, and Boobie's little unnamed baby brother. This book is written in slang, which at first is hard to read, but once you get ten or fifteen pages in you get used to it. I thought that Adam Rapp wrote this book so poetically and the imagery is brilliant. This is a relatively quick read, but I thought it was a very beautiful story and the ending was very gratifying.

Beautiful, Chilling Story

This dark and poignant tale tells a very important story. he story chronicles the journey of 3 troubled and homeless kids. The story switches point of views from Curl a 15 year old prostitute to Custis a homeless boy who has escaped from his abusive "owner." The leader of this crew is Boobie who has just killed his parents and kidnapped his baby brother. This book deals with very difficult but important issues, and Rapp weaves tthe story beautifully. The slang is a bit difficult to understand in the beginning but once you become used to it, it adds a whole new element to the story. The story is distrubing and not easily forgotten but it is meant to stay with the reader. This haunting book is not one you will regret reading.
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