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Book Reviews of Hate List

Hate List
Hate List
Author: Jennifer Brown
ISBN-13: 9780316041447
ISBN-10: 0316041440
Publication Date: 9/1/2009
Pages: 416
Reading Level: Young Adult
Rating:
  • Currently 4.4/5 Stars.
 25

4.4 stars, based on 25 ratings
Publisher: Little, Brown Young Readers
Book Type: Hardcover
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

9 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

reviewed Hate List on + 22 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
4.0 out of 5 stars How do you go on after your boyfriend goes on a shooting rampage?, November 2, 2009
By Denise "DC" (Missouri, USA) - See all my reviews

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This was an excellent YA novel about the aftermath of a school shooting. The protagonist, Valerie, was the girlfriend of the shooter and has to live with the consequences of being known as his ally and as the co-author of the "hate list" that instigated the bloodshed. Was she involved? Did she know he was going to do this?

Valerie returns to high school the fall after the shootings. She is shunned and feared, but tries to continue on. She's been in therapy and she's working through the feelings she has about her boyfriend Nick -- the guy she loved vs the boy who shot her classmates. How did she not know that he was planning this?

This is a well done novel about the aftermath of school violence. How people adapt, change, come to terms with the senseless act. The reactions of enemies, friends, family -- it's all here. There are no pat answers and Valerie isn't magically cured. The violent act changes everyone.

Recommend!
Cindy84 avatar reviewed Hate List on + 118 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Taken From princessbookie.com

My Thoughts: I've been sitting here looking at this page for a while now, trying to come up with the right words for this review. Hate List is like nothing I've ever read before. We are introduced to Valerie and her boyfriend Nick. Valerie is your average high school student; quiet, somewhat dorky, and gets made fun of. Her boyfriend ranks on the same social level as her. This story is told in flashbacks and present time chapters. Nick and Valerie start a hate list, a notebook in which they write peoples names who they do not like or have made fun of them. Its just a simple idea to make themselves feel better. Valerie doesn't think anything serious will have come off it, its just a way to vent off steam.

One day at school Nick shows up. Valerie tells him about a classmate breaking her ipod and Nick goes up to her, pulls out a gun, and starts shooting. As stunned as Valerie is, she jumps in front of another girl (the girl she detests the most) and tells Nick to Stop!! He hurts many students, including Valerie, and then fires the gun on himself.

Valerie is devastated, she never saw this coming. Yes her and Nick talked about suicide, being mad at others, but it was never supposed to be serious. They were "just talking." Valerie has to go back to school the following year and face her demons. She has to graduate and suffer through senior year with everyone looking at her.

This story is amazing. We feel like we are really there experiencing this tragedy. Valerie is shunned, nobody wants anything to do with her, they figure since she was Nick's girlfriend she was in on it and she deserves the same fate he got. Its hard to sum up why this book was so amazing. I was sad because of all the student's deaths, I was just flat out emotional.

If this book is sad, why should I read it? Its the kind of sad that makes you really think about life and whats important. Its not just sad, its also heart-wrenching and you will never see the people who stick by Valerie coming. She does make new friends. You get to see how her family treats her and her therapist. You get to understand Nick a little bit more and realize why he did what he did. As much as I wanted to cry throughout this book its one of those books that even though you know bad things are going to happen, you can't stop yourself from reading.

I recommend this book to anyone who has ever went to high school or lived through any kind of violence at school. Anyone who has been picked on by the bully or has been the bully!

Overall: I loved this one. Yes, it was emotional but it was also really great. The last few pages I did have tears rolling down my cheeks but honestly I'm not sure if they were good or bad tears. Definitely have the Kleenex ready.

Cover: I really like it. I like the black and white aspect of it.
GeniusJen avatar reviewed Hate List on + 5322 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Reviewed by Karin Librarian for TeensReadToo.com

Valerie is alone. Her family tiptoes around her, her friends act like she doesn't exist, and most of the people in the community think she should be dead.

Valerie's boyfriend, the person she trusted more than anyone else, shattered her life when he brought a gun to school and wounded several students and killed many others, including himself. Most people believe Valerie was involved, but she had no idea what Nick was planning.

After spending weeks in the hospital recovering from a near-fatal gunshot wound to the leg, Valerie is moved to the psychiatric ward for observation. Afterwards, during her many therapy sessions, she begins to think back on her relationship with Nick and all the events that led up to the terrible act that changed an entire community.

HATE LIST is an extremely powerful story. I was in tears for the last eighty pages and felt emotionally drained by the time I reached the last page. Jennifer Brown has given us a wonderful example of the importance of keeping a watchful eye out for bullying in our schools.

Valerie is a strong character and it was great to witness her healing process. Once I started HATE LIST I couldn't stop. I read every chance I could. Even though the subject matter is very serious, this book was a pleasure to read.

Thank you, Ms. Brown.
dbo avatar reviewed Hate List on + 74 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
An intense, emotional story, but not in the way I expected. (By the end of the book, I was in tears.) I did not like the way the book started, with all of the flashbacks, but once the story moved into the present and stayed there, I became interested in the main character (Valerie) and it was hard to put the book down.
reviewed Hate List on + 24 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Hate List is an extremely hard core book. It is very good, though, and you can relate to the tears and pain no matter what your background. It shows us what can really happen in today's high schools, and how the feeling of hate can be taken too far...
crprevett avatar reviewed Hate List on + 2 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Not at all what you think it'd be like. Very good read. Slow in the beginning. I learned a lot about myself from reading this novel. I think it is a must for all teenagers.
skywriter319 avatar reviewed Hate List on + 784 more book reviews
HATE LIST has to be breaking new grounds in YA fiction: has there ever been a book about such a difficult subject? It is uncomfortable, heartbreaking...and yet ultimately hopeful.

The book jumps between that fateful spring morning and days following immediately, to the start of Valerie's senior year, to various Valerie-and-Nick moments across high school. While the consistent changes in chronology may be unsettling at times, it does more to draw readers into Valerie's past and mindset. Valerie herself may not be the most sympathetic protagonist around, even in her situation, but inevitably we accept her and all of her twisted thinking.

However, I wouldn't say that this is one of my favorite books dealing with school shootings, nor is it an easily believable portrayal of high school and adolescence in general. I guess I was expecting something that would delve more deeply into the psychological aftereffects of a school shooting on someone who was falsely implicated; however, HATE LIST deals with Valerie's family and social issues much more than her psychological healing.

It's not a particularly mind-blowing novel--especially with underdeveloped supporting characters and a scatterbrained, free-spirited art teacher that just screams "amateur character cliche mistake!"--but HATE LIST will still be an interesting read for most people. It will be a great way to introduce the horrifying traumas of school shootings to younger readers who are not yet ready to read heavily researched true accounts of events such as Columbine.
reviewed Hate List on
This book is one of the best I have ever read. It has something that can relate to anyone in life. Easy to get started reading it. Once you start you don't want to stop.
reviewed Hate List on
This is such a great book! It goes so deep that you feel like you're twins with main character. You feel her pain, anxiety and joy. The topic is so interesting and it helps understand such despair and happiness that can sprout from it. I cried when the main character finally moved on with her life and found true happiness with herself!