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Teen Fiction - Choices & Transitions, Teen Fiction - Romance & Friendship
Intensely Alice (Alice Series) by Phyllis Reynolds Naylor β€” book cover

Intensely Alice (Alice Series)

by Phyllis Reynolds Naylor
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Overview

When the perfect summer is not so perfect...

Wouldn't it be great to go back to the time before Pamela got pregnant, before Patrick left for the University of Chicago, before anyone was making any big decisions about sex or college or life in general? Wouldn't it be great to get the whole gang together again, just once? But what it takes for this to happen will change Alice (and the whole gang) forever.

Synopsis

When the perfect summer is not so perfect...

Wouldn't it be great to go back to the time before Pamela got pregnant, before Patrick left for the University of Chicago, before anyone was making any big decisions about sex or college or life in general? Wouldn't it be great to get the whole gang together again, just once? But what it takes for this to happen will change Alice (and the whole gang) forever.

VOYA

This latest series entry is aptly titled, as Alice and her friends experience intense situations and emotions the summer before their senior year. A beginning jolt shows Alice plotting to have sex with her boyfriend Patrick. Her cousin's wedding allows Alice to see Patrick under the guise of touring his campus, but although a risque bachelorette party sizzles, Patrick fizzles. After a graphic mutual masturbatory scene, they sleep separately. Alice and friends next grapple with religion after meeting Christian fundamentalist Shelley, who vehemently asserts her views are solely correct. Alice, already bewildered by Patrick, adds religious uncertainty to her feelings. After Alice and her girlfriends apartment-sit for her brother and competently handle various difficult problems, their confidence soars. It waivers, however, after their friend Mark is killed in a traffic accident, and they begin experiencing grief, pain, and confusion. Alice again faces religious turmoil, but after time with family, friends, and Mark's parents, she concludes that not having answers to tough questions is natural with living life abundantly. Obvious contrivances propel Alice's situations throughout the story. Religious confusion is a dominant theme, and although Mark's death allows Alice's spiritual growth, it also neatly reunites the series' past and present characters and tidies the plot. Patrick's declining sex with a willing Alice and his virtual disappearance from the story should cause reader skepticism; this theme definitely needed continuation. Regardless female series fans will gobble this enjoyable read. Reviewer: Lisa A Hazlett

About the Author, Phyllis Reynolds Naylor

Phyllis Reynolds Naylor includes many of her own growing-up experiences in the Alice books. She writes for both children and adults and is the author of more than one hundred and thirty-five books, including the Alice series, which Entertainment Weekly has called "tender" and "wonderful." In 1992 her novel Shiloh won the Newbery Medal. She lives with her husband, Rex, in Gaithersburg, Maryland, and is the mother of two sons, both grown and married. Visit Phyllis online at alicemckinley.wordpress.com

Reviews

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Editorials

Children's Literature - Jean Boreen

This latest title in the "Alice" series finds Alice and her friends in the summer before their senior year. Alice is working, looking forward to her cousin's wedding, and trying to figure out if it is time for her and Patrick to finally have sex. Like Alice, her friends are working on defining themselves and their relationships. Along the way, they face their own doubts and God and organized religion, the importance of their various relationships, the necessity for being a member of the larger human community, and finally the death of a close friend. While the issues that Alice and company deal with in the novel are all ones that teens confront, I was disconcerted at times at how easily the characters worked through their issues and concerns. For example, the having sex subplot with Alice and Patrick was never actually discussed by the two characters and the eventual non-event was somewhat romanticized and quick; while this may make parents and some readers happy, this subplot did not really speak to the seriousness of the decisions these teens were making. That said, other challenges, like the chapters focusing on volunteering at a local food kitchen and the death of their friend, brought needed gravity to the book. Fans of the series will, I am sure, be quite satisfied with the book; however, there is other young adult literature that deals with the various issues the author bundles into this book with greater complexity in terms of character development. Reviewer: Jean Boreen, Ph.D.

VOYA - Lisa A Hazlett

This latest series entry is aptly titled, as Alice and her friends experience intense situations and emotions the summer before their senior year. A beginning jolt shows Alice plotting to have sex with her boyfriend Patrick. Her cousin's wedding allows Alice to see Patrick under the guise of touring his campus, but although a risque bachelorette party sizzles, Patrick fizzles. After a graphic mutual masturbatory scene, they sleep separately. Alice and friends next grapple with religion after meeting Christian fundamentalist Shelley, who vehemently asserts her views are solely correct. Alice, already bewildered by Patrick, adds religious uncertainty to her feelings. After Alice and her girlfriends apartment-sit for her brother and competently handle various difficult problems, their confidence soars. It waivers, however, after their friend Mark is killed in a traffic accident, and they begin experiencing grief, pain, and confusion. Alice again faces religious turmoil, but after time with family, friends, and Mark's parents, she concludes that not having answers to tough questions is natural with living life abundantly. Obvious contrivances propel Alice's situations throughout the story. Religious confusion is a dominant theme, and although Mark's death allows Alice's spiritual growth, it also neatly reunites the series' past and present characters and tidies the plot. Patrick's declining sex with a willing Alice and his virtual disappearance from the story should cause reader skepticism; this theme definitely needed continuation. Regardless female series fans will gobble this enjoyable read. Reviewer: Lisa A Hazlett

Book Details

Published
June 1, 2009
Publisher
Simon & Schuster Children's Publishing
Pages
288
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9781416975519

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