Sharon M. Draper is the New York Times bestselling author of Out of My Mind, Blended, and Out of My Heart. She's won Coretta Scott King Awards for Copper Sun and Forged by Fire and multiple honors. She's also the recipient of the Margaret A. Edwards Award honoring her significant and lasting contribution to writing for teens. Sharon taught high school English for twenty-five years and was named National Teacher of the Year. She lives in Florida. Visit her at SharonDraper.com.
"A troupe of high school dance students is rocked when one of their
number disappears.
The Crystal Pointe Dance Academy is a refuge for the group of
students who take classes and participate in dance recitals. Each
of them--Diamond, Layla, Mercedes and Justin, the only boy in the
group--has a different reason to dance, but they all want to earn a
role in the upcoming production of Peter Pan. When Diamond
disappears during a routine trip to the mall, the close-knit group
is thrown into emotional turmoil that mounts as the days go by. As
it turns out, Diamond has been lured by a sexual predator dangling
the promise of a movie audition and finds herself in a dire
situation. While the four main characters alternate narration, this
is really a two-sided story: Diamond's story of abduction and
exploitation, and the everyday concerns her friends face back home.
The other dancers face tough situations, from relationship
conflicts to a parent returning home after a long incarceration.
Diamond's story, though, with elements of suspense and sexual
horror, is the more interesting of the two, and readers will find
themselves impatient to get back to her ordeal, which is depicted
frankly but with sensitivity. Threading through it all is the
importance of the arts as a vehicle to get through tough times. By
turns pulse-pounding and inspiring."-- "Kirkus Reviews"
Gr 9 Up-Draper has created a nurturing setting for her characters in the Crystal Pointe Dance Academy where students have been dancing and working together for years. Miss Ginger, their instructor, provides support and challenge in endeavors like the spring showcase or the upcoming production of Peter Pan. Diamond, 15, is swept off her feet by a stranger's promise of an audition for a movie when he finds her alone at the mall. Her BFF, Mercedes, gets a cryptic text before they are to meet at the food court to go to the academy for a performance. Through drugs and restraints, villainous Thane and his henchmen cameramen, as well as other paying participants, abuse Diamond as the unwilling star in Internet pornography for days. Meanwhile, with only intermittent plot coverage of Diamond's ordeal, the dance academy and school hold vigils and worry about their classmate. Most chapters actually deal with Layla: she doesn't acknowledge fellow dancer Justin's crush because she is more concerned about boyfriend, Donny, who gets dangerous and abuses her when he feels jealous or insecure. Layla suffers from some bad judgment, a mostly absentee mother, and the challenge of her father being released after six years in prison. This realistic novel takes on too many characters and plotlines, and the scattershot approach may leave readers less engaged and invested. Dance enthusiasts should enjoy the depictions of costumes, jitters, daunting roles, and therapeutic workouts. However, multiple issues-bullying, kidnapping, sexual enslavement by a predator-pedophile, abusive teen relationships, and sexting-result in hot-button overload.-Suzanne Gordon, Lanier High School, Sugar Hill, GA (c) Copyright 2013. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
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