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Hardcover The Solid Gold Kid Book

ISBN: 0440081076

ISBN13: 9780440081074

The Solid Gold Kid

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Recommended

Format: Hardcover

Condition: Good*

*Best Available: (ex-library)

$18.69
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Book Overview

What will heaven be like? Randy Alcorn presents a thoroughly biblical answer, based on years of careful study, presented in an engaging, reader-friendly style. His conclusions will surprise readers... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

An interesting connection between an excellent book and an excellent movie

I have now read this book at least sevent times and am working on memorizing it. I have read a lot of kidnapping stories and this one is honestly the best one out there if you're looking for one from the victim's point of view. (It even touches upon the parent's point of view a little bit near the end.) One of my favorite movies is "The Breakfast Club." If you are not sure if you want to read this book but are familiar with and like this movie, then you will enjoy "The Solid Gold Kid" just as much. In this movie, five high school age kids are thrown together for a Saturday detention class: three guys and two girls, the same as in the novel. They don't know each other at the outset but, throughout the day, come to know a lot about each other and end up actually being pretty good friends. It has been said that the kids in "The Solid Gold Kid" represent a pretty rounded representation of different social classes and circles (a rich kid, a Black guy, a Jewish girl, a middle-class white guy with glasses - whom I picture as kind of pudgy and medium height - and a strong-willed girl). The same happens in "The Breakfast Club." There are the Jock, the Criminal, the Princess, the Basket Case, and the Brain. The scene that especially solidifies this theory is the scene in the movie near the end where the students are all sitting in a semi-circle and each of them ends up taking a turn revealing their deepest secret and how it connnects them to being in detention that day. At the end of both the movie and the book, there is a certain level of commeradery, friendship, trust, and overall a genuine connection that these kids actually needed to find and wouldn't have unless they were all thrown together in this situation and had to learn to deal with it. Earlier I stated that the five characters in each of the stories are very similar. Not to make any judgements about them (especially religious or racial judgements) but based on their attitudes about the situations they are thrust into and partially just plain on how I imagine them, this is how I would pair them up across the stories. Derek = the Jock. Pam = the Princess. Jeff = the Criminal. Ed = the Brain. Wendy = the Basket Case. I don't want to influence how you read each of these characters but I just wanted to finish up my comparison of the ten characters. The two stories are even similar right down to the fact that in both there are really mean adults over them who abuse their power/authority. This truly is an excellent book. If you're still not sure you want to spend more than two hours deeply involved in a plot like this (and you WILL get deeply involved - it can't be helped), watch "The Breakfast Club" and from that you should be able to decide if you want to read "The Solid Gold Kid," right down to the quote at the very beginning(?) of the movie. Ooooh... that's one to think on...

GREAT BOOK

I read this book in school, I thought it would be boring because I am into Sci-Fi Books. Really I enjoyed it. Day by day my class read it and during the middle I wondered if the boy and his friends would escape safely. If you want to know you have to read it for yourselves.

I've read it at least four times!!!

I love stories and movies like this! The authors have a way of putting you right in those chairs, that attic, the van, right along with Derek and his friends. If you're looking for a book that you can really put yourself into, this is the one!

Mazer and Mazer writing is great

The book is so unusual for a kidnapping story but it is so good. I picked it up and couldn't put it down until I had completly finished it. I have read it twice since then and it just as good the second and third times. I live in Silicon Valley and go to what a lot of people would consider a school for preppies, so I know that the character of Derek Chapman is so realistic. The last part of the book was so full of the realism of the shock of surviving a kidnpping, I had to look up while I was reading it to make sure that I was still me and that I was still at home.

more than just a kidnapping story

The Solid Gold Kid was a little slow and contained some unnecessary details in the first chapter, but after that, I couldn't put the book down. In the last 25% of the book, Mazer and Mazer gave a powerful and realistic account of the psychological effects of having been kidnapped. This gave the book more meaning and separates it from other "typical" kidnapping stories.
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