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Dark Angel by David Klass
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Dark Angel

by David Klass

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Showing 1-5 of 6 (next | show all)
whoa. I think many 9th graders would eat this book up. On the same level as Shattering Glass!! There’s only one small part of the book that is not fast paced and riveting. The ending is problematic since Jeff despises his brother throughout the book and then allows him to escape without telling the authorities where he went.
  bookwoman137 | Jan 20, 2010 |
Richie's Picks: DARK ANGEL by David Klass, Farrar, Straus & Giroux, Frances Foster Books, October 2005, ISBN: 0-374-39950-6.

"The links between brain chemistry and behavior reveal problems facing research in social and political science if the life sciences are ignored. An estimated 11 million American children take Ritalin and many others exhibit ADD, ADHD, or other learning disabilities. Over 83 million Americans take Prozac, Zoloft and other medications for depression or other psychological conditions, including seasonal affective disorder and sexual addiction. More directly related to politics, environmental toxins such as lead, cadmium, mercury, arsenic, or manganese can damage the brain and increase risks of criminal violence and other behavioral problems. These empirical observations are relevant to public policies in education, criminal justice, or health care, and indicate the need to reconsider theories of human and social political behavior. To do so, however, is impossible without a detailed knowledge of human biology."

--BIOLOGY AND POLITICS: Linking Nature and Nurture by R. D. Masters, Department of Government, Dartmouth College.

"My parents went to get Troy in our SUV. It was a Saturday and they left early in the morning. It would take them till about noon to make it to the prison, and I figured they would be home with Troy before nightfall.
"I didn't go. I didn't need to make an excuse or offer an explanation--I just said that I wasn't going, and they didn't press me.
"I figured I would see him soon enough.
From our front porch, I watched my parents walk across our front lawn toward our blue SUV. My mom was all decked out for the reunion in a yellow dress, pumps, and carefully applied makeup. I wondered if while she had been applying her eyeliner and lipstick, she had been conscious of the fact that she was on her way to a state penitentiary.
"My poor mother. When she reached the SUV's door, she turned and waved to me once, and there was such tension in the simple gesture that I wanted to go give her a hug and beg her to stay here with me, and not subject herself to this ordeal. My mom is a tall woman, just an inch or two shorter than my dad. She's had a problem with nervous tension over the past few years, and she's on medication to help her stay calm.
"I could tell by looking at her eyes that she hadn't slept a wink the previous night. I wondered how many pills she had taken that morning."

Seventeen year-old Jeff Hastings used to live in Upstate New York with his parents and his big brother Troy. But the family was totally ostracized by their community--and Jeff seriously beaten up--after Troy was arrested, tried as an adult, and convicted of plunging a seven inch knife into a classmate. Troy received a life sentence for the crime.

The family has made a new start in a small town amid the New Jersey pine barrens. Jeff has a beautiful girlfriend Beth, lots of friends on the soccer team where he's a backup wing, and the reputation for being a good guy.

But after five years in prison Troy is being released on a technicality and coming back to live with his family. Jeff is convinced Troy's coming to Pineville will ruin Jeff's life a second time. More importantly, Jeff is sure Troy is evil and dangerous.

"Had Troy really changed? Do bad people become good through penance and reflection? I sat there on the corner of the bed and watched the afternoon give way to evening, as the branches from the crab apple seemed to twist longer and longer in the fading light, and I couldn't help doubting it. I knew Troy. For years he was my big brother, my closest friend, my teacher. I had learned from him, and then, even as a young child, I had sensed that there was something wrong with him, something missing in him, and I had gradually turned against him. By the time he was arrested for murder, I had become very afraid of him.
"Leopards don't change their spots. Crab apple trees don't suddenly grow cherries. Troy would never change."

"Don't you plead me your case, don't bother to explain
Don't even show me your face, 'cause it's a crying shame
Just go back to the rock from under which you came
Take the sorrow you gave and all the stakes you claim
And don't forget the blame."
--Fiona Apple, "Criminal"

Jeff is incredibly bitter before Troy even arrives. When he informs Beth about the impending arrival of the brother he'd never previously told her about, Beth's protective father immediately forbids her to even talk to Jeff.

Jeff doesn't dare tell anyone else about Troy.

In the most suspenseful young adult novel I've read since the Edgar Award-winning ACCELERATION, David Klass probes the biochemical, societal, and religious theories regarding the roots of evil.

Klass' 2001 young adult novel YOU DON'T KNOW ME remains one of my all-time favorite YAs. In DARK ANGEL, as with YOU DON'T KNOW ME, we meet a beautiful girl and her seemingly overprotective father. The significant teacher character this time is a science teacher, Mr. Tsuyki, rather than the music teacher, Mr. Steenwilly. (We do get an extremely brief look at Beth playing her cello that hints of the band practice descriptions in YOU DON'T KNOW ME.) But the darkness in John's story of abuse from YOU DON'T KNOW ME doesn't begin to compare to this disturbing tale of two brothers.

Richie Partington
http://richiespicks.com
BudNotBuddy@aol.com ( )
  richiespicks | May 22, 2009 |
Good story for boys. ( )
  jpyzik | Nov 13, 2007 |
Jeff is dreading having to expose his family secret. Troy, his brother, has just been released from jail on a technicality. He was convicted of murder and had served five in prison.
Jeff doesn't trust Troy when he comes back into the family, despite their parents desire to give Troy another chance. This is a dark, heavy novel, but a very interesting read. ( )
  ewyatt | Mar 27, 2007 |
Gripping and dark, David Klass brings forth Dark Angel, asking readers, “What do you do with the secret that can disrupt your entire life, and what do you do when that secret has come back to you?” Jeff Hasting has moved to a quiet town in New Jersey to start his life again. He’s a popular 17-year-old, who has a pretty girlfriend, a spot on the soccer team, and a convicted murder for an older brother. In fact, Troy Hasting attacked and killed a young man in Buffalo, which caused his family to flee to their new life, while leaving behind all memories of Troy. When a legal technicality results in Troy’s freedom, Jeff and his family must adapt to their new life with Troy. Jeff looses both his girlfriend and his best friend, all the while wishing he could loose his brother. Meanwhile, Troy is apparently courting the correct side of the law, but when a local teen goes missing, Jeff and all the townspeople are forced to evaluate how much a person can change.
Klass takes a much different approach to this work than some of his pervious novels. Gritty and urgent, the somber tone of the book envelops the reader throughout the course of the story. Jeff is a sympathetic character, and the reader has no problem accepting his conflicted emotions regarding his brother. Some of the insights seem a little “deus ex machina” and the ending seems to be a 180 turn in both Jeff’s behavior and motivation. However, as a work dealing with family members in prison, especially for young adults, this work is quite compelling.
Read this if you like Monster by Walter Dean Myers, Hole in My Life by Jack Gantos, or Under the Wolf, Under the Dog by Adam Rapp.

__________________________________________________​

Evil has taken up residence in the Hastings’ guest room, one floor beneath where 17-year-old Jeff sleeps. Jeff and his family attempted to avoid this evil, leaving behind their old life in Buffalo and suppressing the memories of their previous existence. However, that evil has caught up with the Hastings family. Troy Hastings, convicted of murder 5 years ago, arrived in Pineville, New Jersey to restart his life.
With Troy back in town, Jeff re-discovers the survival skills he hoped to forget: the instinct to not look panicked; to avoid looking people in the eye; to avoid friends more than enemies. Jeff never wanted to be the soccer star, the prom king, or the valedictorian. His goal was to avoid the isolation, the stares, the whispers. Now, all Jeff can think about is the first time his classmates turned against him, and that whistling punch.
It’s a funny description, but punches do whistle toward you. And then they stop with a CRACK.
5 years ago, a punch whistled towards Jeff and broke his nose. One clean shot. CRACK.
At the CRACK when the fist hit Jeff’s face, there was a flash of light. He was on the ground, on his back, and there was a roaring in his ears. The sickening, sweet taste and smell of blood was in his mouth, damp and thick and cottony.
This time though, it’s not Jeff who gets punched, but Troy. A quick punch, a broken jaw, and Troy heads off, a convict trying to rebuild his life alone. Except it didn’t happen that way. It should have, but it didn’t. ( )
  cinf0master | Mar 7, 2007 |
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Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0374399506, Hardcover)

A taut psychological thriller for teens
 
Seventeen-year-old Jeff thought he would never again have to deal with his older brother, a convicted murderer serving a life sentence. But after six years, Troy’s sentence has been overturned on a technicality and he is released from prison. He returns to a family deeply divided about having him back home. Jeff can’t forget how his life was disrupted by his brother, how his family had to move to another state and start over. Still, his parents believe things will be different now. But Troy’s return makes a mess of Jeff ’s life – at home, at school, and with his girlfriend. When Jeff ’s rival on the soccer field turns up missing, Jeff suspects Troy is involved, and he sets out to prove it. But nothing could prepare Jeff for what happens as he gets closer to the truth.

With unexpected flashes of humor, David Klass once again gives readers a gripping, multilayered novel about good and evil and the powerful bonds of family.
 
Dark Angel is a 2006 Bank Street - Best Children's Book of the Year.

(retrieved from Amazon Thu, 14 Feb 2013 13:27:23 -0500)

When his older brother is released from prison, seventeen-year-old Jeff's family secret is revealed, causing upheaval in his home, school and love life. A taut psychological thriller for teens nbsp; Seventeen-year-old Jeff thought he would never again have to deal with his older brother, a convicted murderer serving a life sentence. But after six years, Troy's sentence has been overturned on a technicality and he is released from prison. He returns to a family deeply divided about having him back home. Jeff can't forget how his life was disrupted by his brother, how his family had to move to another state and start over. Still, his parents believe things will be different now. But Troy's return makes a mess of Jeff 's life - at home, at school, and with his girlfriend. When Jeff 's rival on the soccer field turns up missing, Jeff suspects Troy is involved, and he sets out to prove it. But nothing could prepare Jeff for what happens as he gets closer to the truth. With unexpected flashes of humor, David Klass once again gives readers a gripping, multilayered novel about good and evil and the powerful bonds of family.… (more)

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