A Brief Chapter in My Impossible Life
User reviews
I found this book sad but truthful, many people have to go through people dying of cancer and it is heartbreaking (my grandpa). My mom's best friend just adopted a baby and he is a african american, but alot of people (even the doctors) think he is to light to be a African American, so we are thinking that the birth mother named the wrong dad... it is a total drama but this could lead him(Isaac) into some of the things that happened to Simone. I liked Zack, he is a very cool guy in my eyes and he sounds nice.
Simone is an adopted teen who has known all along she is adopted, but has not cared to know about her birth parents. When her adoptive parents start mentioning her birth mom, Simone is very resistant to knowing what her birth mother could want.
Although at first I couldn't really get into this book because some of the situations and language were pretty racy (16 year olds getting drunk, having sex and using pretty strong, foul language), I soon did start to feel for the main character. Simone's journey from at first rejecting the idea of knowing anything about her birth mother, to embracing her and embracing her Jewish background, did pull me into the story. The characters were overall well-rounded and I appreciated that Simone came full circle, matured, and always had her loving and supportive family and friends around her. I would recommend this one, however, not to the pre-teens or younger teens
Even though I strongly go against some of the beliefs in this book,i enjoyed it.The thing I really hated about it was how the main character was so hard headed and sort of stubborn but she knew what she wanted and I envy that.Also I didnt like the fact how she was Atheius and sometimes was kind of rude to other religions,but all in all it was really good.Even if it does support some things I don't like same-sex marriages,for example.
In this book, Simone's birth mother, Rivka, wants to finally meet her daughter. Simone says no at first, but finally decides to meet Rivka, who, from what her adoptive mother has told her, is nothing like what Simone expected. Simone is struggling with her own identity, just like most teenagers, and throwing Rivka into the mix isn't helping. Simone starts to care for her mother--only to learn that Rivka is dying.
Dana Reinhardt does a fabulous job bringing the reader into Simone's world, and into her mind and heart. Simone is just one of the amazingly lifelike characters that populate Reinhardt's world, characters who we come to love and hate but are never boring. This book has the reader laughing one minute at Simone's friend Cleo and what's changed about her over the summer , and then crying about Rivka's illness.
This book is amazing! Pick it up next time you're at the library or the bookstore, and you won't be disappointed.
Simone is an adopted sixteen year old who has lived a happy atheist life up until now--her birth mother wants to meet her. Suddenly
Simone's world is turned upside down when she agrees to get to know her birth mother. Rivkah is Jewish (originally an Orthodox Jew) and is
dying from cancer, but Simone is enjoying (mostly) getting to know her anyway. Simone also is dealing with changing friendships (one friend
is dating a guy no good for her, another is pining for a guy he met at camp and her younger brother seems to be growing up quicker than she
is), getting a crush and becoming more involved in extracurricular activities. Overall, this is a powerful book about a teenage girl questioning who she really is and what she believes. Simone is a well developed character--you see her stubborness at the beginning of the book (there is no God) and watch as her black and whites in life become gray (perhaps there is a God...but she's not completely convinced yet). Her development is believable and her relationship with the adults in her life is accurate (though sometimes disheartening when she harshly talks about her parents). Note: there is some strong language, frank talk about sex and some tough life situations. This felt a lot like a Meg Cabot book, but one level up with storyline, language and style.
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