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The Shadow Club by Neal Shusterman
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The Shadow Club (edition 2002)

by Neal Shusterman

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186957,987 (3.94)None
Member:hockeykid13
Title:The Shadow Club
Authors:Neal Shusterman
Info:Puffin (2002), Paperback, 192 pages
Collections:Your library
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The Shadow Club by Neal Shusterman

2 (2) 9 (1) 55 (1) bullying (2) clubs (4) delinquent (1) fantasy (3) fiction (14) friendship (4) gangs (2) gr8 (2) grade 7 (1) grade 8 (4) inferiority (3) juvenile (2) middle school (2) mystery (5) Neal Shusterman (4) own (2) practical jokes (5) pranks (7) read (3) realistic fiction (7) school (5) sports (1) supernatural (3) suspense (5) teen (3) YAL (2) young adult (14)

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Showing 1-5 of 9 (next | show all)
Well I did read it but I do not think I am going to read book 2. Maybe I will. A lot of YA books are great reads for adults as well, but this one not really imo. Definitely not a bad read. Maybe the characters were lacking. I did not like one person and could not really relate to them.
3 stars an okay read.
  Marlene-NL | Apr 12, 2013 |
The Shadow Club is a novel that focuses on a group of kids that live "in the shadows of others," and begin to pull pranks on people they view as above them. Eventually, things get out of hand, and the novel really portrays an interesting perspective on human nature. I think for a lower-level reader, this book would be a great one to get them invested in the reading. It's a book that immediately grabs the reader, and the plot and devices are very surface-level. I think that with the easiness of the actual reading, it would be a great way to be sure everyone felt comfortable discussing their thoughts on the novel, which would be an excellent conversation. ( )
  PKKingster | Sep 29, 2010 |
I'm no stranger to Neal Shusterman, so when I saw this book with his name on it at the library, I had to pick it up. Once I read the back, I convinced myself that it would be interesting.

When fourteen year old Jared and his friends decide to form a club of "second-bests" and play anonymous tricks on each other's arch rivals, the harmless pranks escalate until they become life-threatening.

This book had more potential than it did worth. It was all right. Very quick, I read it in less than a day. But it could have been more, ya know? If only Shusterman could have went deeper and really explored his characters then it would have been fantastic. I felt the characters were nothing more than a name on a page, instead of well-developed individuals. The story was kind of disturbing and a tad unrealistic. Like these guys were in a life-threatening situation and are making jokes about piss. Anyway, I would say the writing is for middle-schoolers, but the material might just satisfy older readers too.

I don't particularly recommend it, but if you like Neal Shusterman, give it a shot. I don't think I'll seek the sequel, but if I come across it, I might read it. ( )
  Awesomeness1 | Feb 11, 2010 |
Reviewed by Me for TeensReadToo.com

Meet the second-bests: a group of kids who, although they have one thing they're best at, still get beat daily by the "unbeatables." Although these kids are good kids, well-behaved, smart, athletic, interesting, their lives are being ruined by those who always seem to be one step ahead, stealing the limelight and rubbing it in until you just wish they'd never been born.

Thus is the basis for THE SHADOW CLUB, a secret group of seven kids who decided to get back at those who make their lives miserable by playing harmless pranks on them--pranks that will embarass them before their admirers, and give the second-besters their just due.

Except revenge, as revenge always seems to do, comes back to bite you in the butt. Pranks start getting out of control, even though they're not being comitted by the Shadow Club members. Someone's out to sabotage their club, and one of the "unbeatables" could wind up getting seriously hurt--even killed. As the Club seeks to get the biggest loser in school, Tyson McGaw, to confess to the pranks, the Shadow Club comes to realize that they might not be the all-around good kids that they thought they were.

What started out as fun is turning into something darker, and no one seems to know how to make it stop.

THE SHADOW CLUB is a great read by Neal Shusterman. Dealing with human nature, the fact that kids can traumatize each other more than anyone else can, and the fact that we all have anger inside of us is forefront in the story. A great read! ( )
  GeniusJen | Oct 13, 2009 |
We are reading this right now in our Lit class! Cant wait to finish it!
  bookworm90210 | Oct 8, 2009 |
Showing 1-5 of 9 (next | show all)
"Powerful...Every who has felt resentment will indentify with these young people, their anger, and their terror."
added by Awesomeness1 | editKirkus Reviews
 
"An engrossing book...Shusterman vividly coveys the overwhelming qualities of violent emotions and chillingly shows how a group of 'nice' people can become a vengeful mob."
added by Awesomeness1 | editPublisher's Weekly
 
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Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0142300942, Paperback)

The Shadow Club starts simply enough: the kids who are tired of being second-best get together and, for the first time, talk about how they feel. But soon the members decide to play practical jokes on the first-place winners they envy, and things begin to spin dangerously out of control.

"This is a provocative novel . . . The plot is ingeniously simple and the course of events compelling. Brisk enough to snag a popular audience, but forceful in impact, it will leave readers thinking." (Booklist, starred review)

(retrieved from Amazon Thu, 14 Feb 2013 13:49:48 -0500)

(see all 3 descriptions)

When a junior high school boy and his friends decide to form a club of "second bests" and play anonymous tricks on each other's arch rivals, the harmless pranks escalate until they become life-threatening.

(summary from another edition)

» see all 2 descriptions

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