Fallout (novel)

Fallout 4

Summary

[1] Hunter, Autumn, and Summer—three of Kristina Snow’s five children—live in different homes, with different guardians and different last names. They share only a predisposition for addiction and a host of troubled feelings toward the mother who barely knows them, a mother who has been riding with the monster, crank, for twenty years. Hunter is nineteen, angry, getting by in college with a job at a radio station, a girlfriend he loves in the only way he knows how, and the occasional party. Autumn doesn’t know about Hunter, Summer, or their two youngest brothers, Donald and David. She lives with her single aunt and alcoholic grandfather. When her aunt gets married, and the only family she’s ever known crumbles, Autumn’s compulsive habits lead her to drink. Summer is the youngest of the three. And to her, family is only abuse at the hands of her father’s girlfriends and a slew of foster parents. As each searches for real love and true family, they find themselves pulled toward the one person who links them together—Kristina, Bree, mother, addict. But it is in each other, and in themselves, that they find the trust, the courage, the hope to break the cycle.

Characters

Reception

Fallout, like all of Ellen Hopkins' books, is written in stanzas like poems on each page and is told by Kristina's three oldest kids: Hunter, Autumn, and Summer. Johanna Lewis for School Library Journal complimented the "not-quite poetry", noting that it was "as solid as ever, though her visual formations get more mystifying and extraneous with each novel".[2] If the book were turned into a movie it would be rated R. Barbara Johnston for Voice of Youth Advocates praised Hopkins saying that even though it contained F-bombs and some sexual description, the "poetry is the perfect vehicle to deliver the festering emotional beating that drug addiction inflicts on families."[3] Even with all the buzz about

References

  1. http://www.wondrousreads.com/2010/09/review-fallout-by-ellen-hopkins.html
  2. 1 2 Lewis, Johanna (September 2010). "Hopkins, Ellen. Fallout.". School Library Journal (Library Journal LLC) 56 (9): 155. Retrieved 9 March 2011.
  3. 1 2 Johnston, Barbara (October 2010). "Hopkins, Ellen. Fallout.". Voice of Youth Advocates (LC Kurdyla): 672. Retrieved 9 March 2011.

Bibliography

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