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Jellicoe Road by Melina Marchetta
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Jellicoe Road (original 2006; edition 2010)

by Melina Marchetta

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingConversations / Mentions
2,1352207,426 (4.22)1 / 110
Abandoned by her drug-addicted mother at the age of eleven, high school student Taylor Markham struggles with her identity and family history at a boarding school in Australia.
Member:mtome
Title:Jellicoe Road
Authors:Melina Marchetta
Info:HarperTeen (2010), Edition: 1 Reprint, Paperback, 432 pages
Collections:Your library
Rating:*****
Tags:None

Work Information

On the Jellicoe Road by Melina Marchetta (2006)

  1. 20
    If I Stay by Gayle Forman (avalon_today)
  2. 10
    Looking for Alaska by John Green (thesundaybookreport)
  3. 00
    To Jaykae: Life Stinx by Jean Davies Okimoto (thesundaybookreport)
  4. 00
    The Gorgon in the Gully by Melina Marchetta (Herenya)
    Herenya: This is the story of Jonah Griggs' 10 year old brother and is set during On the Jellicoe Road. It's also a lot of fun.
  5. 00
    Jasper Jones by Craig Silvey (bluenotebookonline)
    bluenotebookonline: Also Australian, also up for the Prinz, and also mesmerizing
  6. 00
    What I Was by Meg Rosoff (amz310783)
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» See also 110 mentions

English (216)  Hungarian (1)  Swedish (1)  All languages (218)
Showing 1-5 of 216 (next | show all)
I was totally mystified by the first half of this novel. Best guess was that this was some sort of dystopian setting, with the Students, Townies and Cadets fighting it out for territory on a post-apocalyptic world. Another reviewer said she didn't understand what was happening for the first 100 pages, so I kept going, but it took till about page 200 before I had a grasp on this story. I have to say I don't know why this won the Printz Award, but maybe if I'd read it when it was first published...So, yeah, it was an interesting story, but not a winner for me. ( )
  fromthecomfychair | Jun 13, 2023 |
I don’t even know where to begin with Jellicoe Road by Melina Marchetta. I spent the first third of the book deciding whether I was going to set it aside or not but it was interesting enough that I continued to read on as I wanted to know what was going on. Eventually I couldn’t put it down as I was totally captured by the characters, the setting and the tense atmosphere. The writer gives the reader fragments of various stories and leaves it to us to fit all the pieces together.

This Australian YA story is hard to define or describe, set in and around the grounds of a private school, part of the story is about the yearly territory battles that occur between the students of the school, the cadets that come and camp nearby and the local kids or “Townies”. Revolving around the leaders of each group, Taylor for the school, Jonah for the cadets and Santiago for the Townies, we learn of past and present relationships. There is also a story from the past, involving five young people whose legacy is still being felt, and far off, at the edge of the story, there is a serial killer who has been operating in the area for some time.

Jellicoe Road engages the reader with it’s intricate structure, nuanced writing and the interwoven lives of the characters. It is complex tale that reduced me to tears by the end of book. A well blended combination of mystery and romance, this was a very powerful story. ( )
  DeltaQueen50 | Feb 25, 2023 |
This book won the Printz Award this year, and I've noticed that I tend to love these award winners, except for when I really, really DON'T (White Darkness.)

Anyway, On the Jellicoe Road was a very beautiful, intricate story of memory, drama, and friendship told by a compelling young woman living at a boarding school in Australia. The telling of the story included snippets of dreams, a novel being written by one of the characters, and even writing on an old tree at the school. It moved slowly but eventually the world pulled me in and I can tell it is one of those stories whose landscape is going to remain vivid in my mind. ( )
  kamlibrarian | Dec 23, 2022 |
To me this book has just such an essence of summer days, of being young, of friendship, of love and family, of growth, all wrapped up in the mystery that connects the past and present. Taylor’s own narrative starts off darker as the tragedy she has experienced of being abandoned by a junkie mother and being present for a man’s suicide is faced, interspersed with the lighter narratives of the friendships and relationships between Narnie, Webb, Jude, Fitz and Tate from the past. As the book progresses Taylor’s own story becomes more hopeful as she develops deeper relationships with those around her which is juxtaposed with how the narrative of the past takes a darker turn when those characters world starts to fall apart with the loss of one of their own. While the book started off a bit slow I found the characters intriguing and charming enough and was quickly fully hooked. It had me questioning everything the entire time as I got completely enveloped into the mystery of Jellicoe. It was touching and amazing and I didn’t expect to cry as much as I did at the end of it. ( )
  Oblivionsdream | Jul 18, 2022 |
It's a murder mystery and a thriller rolled into one. Glorious! HEA=2

This is so... I feel all clogged up, like weeping my soul out. To scream and to cry and to laugh and to mourn. It's beautiful and tragic and wonderful and sad.

It's raw and painful and achingly hopeful. I hate it because I love it so much. It's death, death, death, and despair and an endless well of hope.

It's complex and hard and strange. I want to lock it inside my heart, my soul and keep it forever like a secret.

FINAL VERDICT: READ, KEEP, SPREAD THE WORD

You ain't read nothing like it. ( )
  QuirkyCat_13 | Jun 20, 2022 |
Showing 1-5 of 216 (next | show all)
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For Daniel and for Max
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My father took one hundred and thirty-two minutes to die.
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Abandoned by her drug-addicted mother at the age of eleven, high school student Taylor Markham struggles with her identity and family history at a boarding school in Australia.

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Penguin Australia

An edition of this book was published by Penguin Australia.

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