Record Details
Book cover

Suburban dangers

Sixteen-year-old Kaki Jones is a straight-A student, runs on the cross country track team and exemplifies the all-around great teenager. Her younger brother Brandon is the opposite. He parties, fights at school, has photos of naked girls on his cell phone and is in trouble with the police. But Kaki is the one who harbors a dark secret. Her life has changed ever since she met the cool girl, Sydney Diaz. Now Kaki is a sophomore by day and a commodity sold at the hands of gang members by night. She is now controlled by threats of violence against those she loves. This is the story of what happens when parents look the other way, when a stranger offers more affection than a father and when God's deliverance is the only answer.

Book  - 2017
FIC Lee
1 copy / 0 on hold

Available Copies by Location

Location
Community Centre Available
  • ISBN: 9781611168945
  • Physical Description 321 pages ; 21 cm
  • Publisher [Place of publication not identified] : [publisher not identified], 2017.

Additional Information

Syndetic Solutions - School Library Journal Review for ISBN Number 9781611168945
Suburban Dangers
Suburban Dangers
by Lee, Megan Whitson
Rate this title:
vote data
Click an element below to view details:

School Library Journal Review

Suburban Dangers

School Library Journal


(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Gr 9 Up-Katherine (Kaki) Jones leads a normal suburban life. She's a straight-A student and track team member with divorced parents and a little brother. In this overstuffed problem novel, all it takes is one bad choice in friends to plunge a regular girl into the world of drugs, gangs, and sex trafficking. If Kaki's fall from grace, which reads a lot like Go Ask Alice, isn't traumatizing enough for readers, there are also her alcoholic stepmom, her pornography addict dad, and her younger brother, who has been caught distributing pictures of naked classmates and may be hanging out with a gang. Just another day in suburbia, right? Even the adults who provide eventual help have all dealt with the same issues-the detective was pimped out as a teen, as was the nurse at the rehab center, and the pastor at the church where Kaki's dad and brother seek counseling just happens to run a support group for porn addicts, born out of his own struggles. While the issues the author introduces are real, jamming them all into one book lessens their impact. Lee's characters are flat, and readers are unlikely to care about them despite their troubles. VERDICT Skip it.-Heather Webb, Worthington Libraries, OH © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.