Fall from Grace
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- $7.99
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- $7.99
Publisher Description
"I need you to steal something for me."
Grace always has a plan. There's her plan to get famous, her plan to get rich, and—above all—her plan to have fun.
Sawyer has plenty of plans, too. Plans made for him by his mother, his father, his girlfriend. Maybe they aren't his plans, but they are plans.
When Sawyer meets Grace, he wonders if he should come up with a few plans himself. Plans about what he actually wants to be, plans to speak his own mind for a change, plans to maybe help Grace with a little art theft.
Wait a minute—plans to what?
From Charles Benoit, acclaimed author of you, comes a witty and unsettling tale of two high school seniors planning the job of a lifetime.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Benoit follows You (2010) with an equally absorbing, though less sadistic, tale of a high school senior whose passivity and conflict-avoidance threaten to trap him in other people's self-interested plans. By appearances, Sawyer leads an enviable life: he's a respectable student, is doted on by involved parents, dates a sexy and popular girlfriend, and has a car, job, and decent college prospects. Only after meeting Grace, a girl from the "other side of the proverbial tracks," whose opening line, "I need you to steal something for me," piques his curiosity, does he become aware of the smothering, coercive nature of his other key relationships. Grace's mysteriousness, cleverness, and unexpected propensity for fun compel Sawyer to participate in her increasingly wild plans to gain celebrity status, while her risk taking and courage inspire him to resist oppressive forces on the home front. Benoit's fast pacing, spot-on dialogue, and plot twists keep readers guessing about Grace ("Trust me.... You've got no idea what I'm thinking"), rooting for Sawyer, and pondering questions about freedom, choice, and integrity in human connections. Ages 13 up.