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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. Best set of books i have ever read in my life. Every single other person i know that has read the trilogy agrees. It's a fantastic version of the problems between "black and white" [i do not mean that in a racist way (: ] and it's a fantastic way to explain to children/ adolescents. Completely moved me. Absolutely most fantastic book of all time. Loved it. READ IT!!!. (: Last in the Noughts & Crosses trilogy, it looks at Callies’ life over the last 15 years. Sephy has not told her the truth about her father, C struggles to deal with her dual status – she is not a Cross and not a nought, and Jude feeds on all this doubt & uncertainty to recruit C into the LM and plan the ultimate terrorist attack. C also battles with the attentions of both nought & Cross boys – her neighbout Tobey, her friends brothe Lucas & the hottest boy in class Amyas. no reviews | add a review
Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0552551945, Paperback)Can the future ever erase the past? Rose has a Cross mother and a Nought father in a society where the pale-skinned Noughts are treated as inferiors and those with dual heritage face a life-long battle against deep-rooted prejudices. Sephy, her mother, has told Rose virtually nothing about her father, but as Rose grows up she becomes determined to find out more about her parentage. As Rose takes her first steps away from Sephy and into her father’s world, she finds herself drawn inexorably into danger.(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:02 -0400) The first test round has been closed. Visit the Open Shelves Classification group for details. |
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After the depressing feel of 'Knife Edge', the second in the trilogy, this is a novel that has a steep path to climb to find some hope for the future, but Blackman manages, perhaps by sheer dint of emotional weight, to suggest possibilities through the believable but terrifying choices her characters are forced to make. As the resolution to the series, this book does include the requisite happy endings while still leaving some room to guess about romantic possibilities. The author's final pages seem designed to suggest that love is the key to all meaning, but the necessary actions of major characters suggest otherwise, leaving a slightly uncomfortable resolution in which Blackman could be seen to argue for the necessity of violence and betrayal. It is worth reading this novel simply to consider what message Blackman wants to put across and whether or not she succeeds. However, the clear language and engaging characters also make this a compelling read.
Overall, this is an emotionally grueling series which sets up key parallels to encourage people to think again about the racially divided world which they inhabit, often thoughtlessly. However, it is not as simple as a treatise on racism; Blackman writes thoughtfully about human relationships and how we treat our families, our friends and our lovers, forcing us to recognise the unintended impacts that we can have on each other. (