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[W836.Ebook] Ebook Pucker, by Melanie Gideon

Ebook Pucker, by Melanie Gideon

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Pucker, by Melanie Gideon

Pucker, by Melanie Gideon



Pucker, by Melanie Gideon

Ebook Pucker, by Melanie Gideon

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Pucker, by Melanie Gideon

Thomas Quicksilver, known to his classmates as "Pucker," has always been an outsider. His crazy mother, the secret of his family’s strange origins, and above all, the terrible scars on his face from a childhood fire—these things have kept Thomas isolated and alone.

Now, at seventeen, a quest to save his dying mother takes Thomas back to his birthplace, an alternate world called Isaura from which he and his mother were exiled years earlier. In Isaura, Thomas’s scars will be magically healed. He will fall in love for the first time. And he will face a devastating, impossible choice.

In shimmering prose, Melanie Gideon’s new novel takes readers from the lonely places in a boy’s soul to a miraculous world of infinite possibility and frightening temptation.

  • Sales Rank: #1419945 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2006-05-18
  • Released on: 2006-05-18
  • Format: Kindle eBook

From School Library Journal
Grade 7 Up Thomas Quicksilver (born Thomas Gale) has lived half his 17 years with burn scars that earned him the nickname Pucker. However, neither the scars nor the change in his name is as traumatic as his adventures in the alternative world of Isaura, his birth home. There, Seers hold political power and failed or ruined humans immigrate only to become servants, or Changed, with no personal will. Thomas, who fled Isaura in childhood with his widowed mother, has adapted well to life in contemporary America. However, Serena is losing her life force and sends him on a mission to restore her Seerskin. Once Thomas returns to his homeland purportedly as one of the Changed he must avoid being identified by the natives, fight to keep alive his own will to find the Seerskin and return to Earth, become accustomed to his newly invoked movie-star good looks, and cope with other Changed ones, including a feisty girl with whom he falls in love. Gideon's many characters are nuanced and credible. None is perfect, and even those with major flaws are shown to have positive attributes. The parallel world, with its adherence to late-19th-century technology, offers much to ponder, not only by readers, but also by Thomas. The only shortcoming of this fascinating novel is its abrupt ending, which, at least, comes after he has re-immigrated to Earth and is living with both his recovering mother and his returned keloid scars. Francisca Goldsmith, Berkeley Public Library, CA
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist
Gr. 8-11. With his face hideously scarred by a childhood fire, 17-year-old Thomas Quicksilver has been cruelly nicknamed "Pucker" by his classmates. But Tom knows that his scars are not the only things that make him an outsider. In fact, he and his mother, Serena, are actually exiles from another world, Isaura, where both of his parents were Seers. Now, to save his mother's life, Thomas must endanger his own by returning to Isaura in search of the seerskin that had been flayed from Serena's body. Though filled with contrivance and a premise that is too complicated, Gideon's first novel has enough page-turning moments of suspense, plot twists and turns, and narrative surprises to hold readers' interest to its improbable happy ending. Michael Cart
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Review
Gideon's skill at storytelling transcends genres; it's funny how realistic this novel makes this made-up world. -- San Francisco Chronicle

Gideon’s prose is carefully crafted.... a compelling novel about a tortured and confused but ultimately beautiful protagonist... -- BCCB

This novel is awe-inspiring, amazing, and most of all, well written. -- VOYA

Most helpful customer reviews

4 of 4 people found the following review helpful.
good fantasy
By terryannlibrarian
The alternate world in this book (Isaura) is remeniscent of the Irish Faerie world in the New Policeman. Pucker explores the life of a horribly scarred teen and his dying mother.
This is a well written emotionally satisfying book with a look at what it must be like to be tragically disfigured in a world full of beautiful people. Pucker is abused by his fellow man and tested greatly when he must choose between himself being healed and his mother being healed. A good read for fantasy lovers.

3 of 3 people found the following review helpful.
Exquisite award winner!!!
By An Avid Reader
Moving, imaginative, and a page turner, this book embodies what YA fantasy novels should be about!

I check the credentials before I buy (who can afford to spend money on a bad book??!!), and found out this one's just been nominated by the American Library Association to be the best YA book of this year, which it deserves to win.

Enough said.

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful.
A Story About Redemption
By lectitans
Thomas Quicksilver was born in Isaura, a world that exists parallel to our modern Earth. In Isaura, everything is pre-ordained. Family dinners are dictated weeks in advance, not because anyone wants it to be so, but because a group of fortune tellers called The Seers have predicted what they will be. Each day, the citizens of Isaura visit the Seers to learn what their fate is for that day, and how it can be changed for the better. In Isaura, most of the hard labor is performed by a group of people called the Changed: individuals who were deformed or handicapped in some way on Earth but are made whole when they come to Isaura. Both of Thomas's parents were Seers, but he and his mother were exiled to Earth after the death of his father. Thomas was the one who found his father, lying on the kitchen floor dead and stripped of his Seerskin, a glittering golden membrane that makes it possible for Seers to do their work. His mother had been skinned as well. Thomas, afraid and alone, hid under the sink until he thought he could sense Cook, a woman who had cared for him his whole life, coming. He reached up to grab her, but instead, pulled the curtains out of the kitchen window down upon himself; she wasn't there yet, and the candles that were burning in the kitchen when he found his parents had set the curtains aflame. Thomas was burned to the point of deformity.

On Earth, Thomas's mother can use her precognition even without her Seerskin, and makes a living by telling fortunes. Eventually, she starts to sense everything that is about to happen to everyone near her, to the point where she can't be around people anymore because her head has become so crowded with images of their futures. She tells Thomas she needs him to return to Isaura, disguising himself as a candidate to be Changed, and recover her skin. He reluctantly agrees to do so, but once he is in Isaura he finds himself distracted. It turns out if he hadn't been so severely burned, he would have been stunningly handsome. The Changed girls all want to spend time with him, and he enjoys the attention he's never had. He falls in love with another of the Changed, begins to feel himself at home again in Isaura, and is tempted to forget about saving his mother and just stay there. Thomas is torn between his desire to live a life he's never known and his obligation to help his mother.

This is a book about redemption, though it comes to it in a roundabout way. Melanie Gideon has created a fascinating world, and paints a picture of a society that is apparently serene, but exists only because of a disturbing social structure. The world-building Gideon has done here is Pucker's greatest strength. Even when I was tired of Thomas Quicksilver, I still wanted to see how things would turn out for his world.

Thomas Quicksilver is not a flawless hero, and the flaws he has aren't charming. He is, however, an accurate portrait of a teenage boy. If you put down Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix because you found Harry's behavior obnoxious, you shouldn't read Pucker. If, however, you kept reading either because Harry's teenage antics amused you or because you wanted to see how he would grow through it all, then Pucker will provide you with a similar vision of a young man's growth. Thomas Quicksilver does some things that make him near despicable, not the least of which is dating a set of girls all at the same time, disparaging them while doing it, and pursuing another girl who is the one he actually loves. Still, these conflicting actions made him all the more believable to me. Teenage boys chafe against authority, love being an object of desire, and - especially when denied a "normal" experience, as Thomas has been - might drink too deep once offered life's pleasures. While some of Thomas's actions hurt his likability, they absolutely cemented his plausibility. In a book set in a world so different from our own, we need a foothold to understanding the world. Characters who feel the same things we feel and do things we or people we know might do can be that foothold, and that's how Pucker succeeds.

I would recommend this book to fans of the more recent Harry Potter books and anyone who likes stories where utopias are maintained through dystopian circumstances.

See all 14 customer reviews...

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