Review Detail

Young Adult Fiction 197
Pearl
(Updated: March 06, 2016)
Overall rating
 
3.0
Plot
 
N/A
Characters
 
N/A
Writing Style
 
N/A
Illustrations/Photos (if applicable)
 
N/A
Pearl is seventeen and lives on and off the streets of Manhattan with her drug addict former rock star mother. After a tragedy hits, her rich uncle sends Pearl to an elite boarding school for another chance. She seizes on this opportunity as it means she'll be off the streets. But is she strong enough to overcome her mother's drug past?

What worked:This is an edgy dream-like portrayal of a teen coming to grips with her own life after a tragedy has her taken away from her mother. A former rock star, Pearl's mother now is a drug addict. The images are raw, intense, and painful. The neglect and dangerous situations Pearl's mother leaves her in would scar anyone.

Another interesting insight is how not only Pearl but others assume she'll follow in her mother's footsteps. One character, Terran, goes out of her way to make Pearl's life miserable and threatens to expose her past. And Pearl does struggle with the world of drugs. Those scenes are intense.

Hall gives a pretty accurate portrayal of Sorel with her bipolar behavior. Her ups and downs and how she thumbs her nose up at her rich upbringing were very authentic. I wanted to see more of her!

One thing that did bug me was how passive Pearl was through most of this novel. She seemed to be sleep walking through her life. I get that maybe this was her way of dealing with a neglectful mother and being exposed to drugs, alcohol and worse at an early age. More than a few times I wanted to yell, "Don't do it!" She seemed almost too impressible at times.

Some of the scenes at the boarding school go by really fast. As does the summer school scenes which are mostly feel like a drug induced daze. The strength has to be after the climax when Pearl has to rise above the drugs and decide what she wants to be.

Raw insight into a world of drugs and alcohol and a girl that needs to choose to have the courage to rise above it.
Good Points
1. Edgy portrayal of teen coming to grips with her own life
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