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Backwards

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

An edge-of-your-seat thriller asks: Is it possible to fix a tragic future by changing the past — while experiencing life backwards?
At the moment Dan's life ends, the Rider's begins. Unwillingly tied to Dan, who seems to be shuffling through life, the Rider finds himself moving backwards in time, each day revealing more of the series of events that led to Dan's suicide. As the Rider struggles to figure out what he's meant to do, he revels in the life Dan ignores. Beyond the simple pleasures of a hot shower and the sun on his face, the Rider also notices the people around Dan: his little sister, always disappointed by her big brother's rejection, and his overwhelmed mom, who can never rely on Dan for help. Most of all, the Rider notices Cat with her purple hair, artistic talent, and misfit beauty. But Cat doesn't want anything to do with Dan, paying attention instead to popular football player Finn. As the days move in reverse and Halloween looms, Cat becomes the center of the Rider's world — until the Rider finds out the shocking reason why Cat is so angry with Dan. Can the Rider make things right before it's too late?

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  • Reviews

    • School Library Journal

      December 1, 2013

      Gr 7 Up-The "Rider" slips from the body of a high school senior and observes the aftermath of his attempted suicide in the first pages of this suspenseful paranormal novel. Readers have to wait to find out what happened to Dan as the book travels backward in time, beginning on the day he tried to take his own life. The ghostlike Rider lives with Dan through one day only to be thrust back at day's end to the previous day. The Rider is mystified by his current existence and disgusted by the teen to whom he is bound. He becomes increasingly convinced that he must save someone Dan has hurt, and, as time creeps toward that event, the Rider exercises more and more influence to change the outcome of what he has seen. References and parallels to Alice in Wonderland are numerous and apt as the themes of self-perception, identity, and recognizing the consequences of action and inaction emerge. It is ambitious to tell a story backwards, with a nameless narrator who doesn't understand his own existence, or know anything about Dan's history. This reverse plotting sometimes causes the pace to lag, and the disoriented and distanced narrator makes knowing and caring about the characters difficult. The action and emotion accelerate toward the end of the book, however, and the conclusion is at once thought-provoking and satisfying. Readers who stick with the Rider will be rewarded.-Martha Baden, Prescott Public Library, AZ

      Copyright 2013 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • The Horn Book

      January 1, 2014
      Compelling storytelling reveals--in reverse--two intersecting lives. Meticulous crafting allows the story to come out through "the Rider," who is bound to Dan's body and trying frantically to save him from the grisly fate revealed in the first pages. Rather than the aftermath, the Rider probes the origins of Dan's depression and turmoil. The conclusion offers no easy resolution yet is satisfying.

      (Copyright 2014 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

Formats

  • OverDrive Read
  • EPUB ebook

Languages

  • English

Levels

  • Lexile® Measure:680
  • Text Difficulty:3

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