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Torn
 
 

Torn [Kindle Edition]

Stephanie Guerra
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Product Description

Review

Ages 14+—Stella Chavez’s usual routine—going through the motions of dating, playing soccer, and hanging on the fringe of the popular crowd—forever changes after fiery Ruby Caroline arrives senior year. Instantly drawn to Ruby’s magnetic personality, Stella begins dating a college guy and palling around with Ruby exclusively, losing her former childhood friends in the process. It’s easy to see the attraction to Ruby, who considers high school “an incestuous, viperous little gossip pit” and emanates mystery and a confidence beyond her years. When Ruby enters an abusive relationship with a much older man, turns to drugs, and becomes a pariah at school, Stella must decide where her allegiance lies. Realism drives this debut novel in which Stella finds herself torn on other fronts, too: her Mexican identity and own issues with racism, her responsibility to help her single mother care for the family, and the connections between Ruby’s situation and her drug-addict father’s behaviors. The story’s strong voice and complex characters will convince readers to forgive the too-tidy ending.
Booklist, June 2012

Product Description

Stella Chavez is your classic good girl: straight As, clean-cut boyfriends, and soccer trophies. You'd never guess that Stella's dad was a drug addict who walked out when she was a kid. Or that inside, Stella wishes for something more. New girl Ruby Caroline seems like Stella's polar opposite: cursing, smoking, and teetering in sky-high heels. But with Ruby, Stella gets a taste of another world a world in which parents act like roommates, college men are way more interesting than high school boys, and there is nothing that shouldn't be tried once. It's not long before Stella finds herself torn: between the best friend she's ever had and the friends she's known forever, between her family and her own independence, between who she was and who she wants to be. But Ruby has a darker side, a side she doesn't show anyone not even Stella. As Stella watches her friend slowly unravel, she will have to search deep inside herself for the strength to be a true friend, even if it means committing the ultimate betrayal.

Product details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 357 KB
  • Print Length: 277 pages
  • Page Numbers Source ISBN: B0086E3N06
  • Publisher: Skyscape (15 May 2012)
  • Sold by: Amazon Media EU S.à r.l.
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B007FXRWPQ
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • X-Ray: Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #436,662 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
3.0 out of 5 stars Just needed a little bit more 27 May 2012
Format:Kindle Edition
Oh contemporary YA. I wish I could say ''it's not you, it's me'', but that would be a lie. We are both equally to blame.

Now that I've finished my kinda crazy inner dialogue, let me tell you why Torn has neither improved nor damaged the relationship I have with contemporary YA.

Positives - this is a YA story without romance. Sure, there are boys but they are not the focus of the story, the friendship between two girls, Stella and Ruby, is the main focus, with some asides into family relationships, self-esteem, high school bitchiness and some other of the 'harder-hitting' YA subjects.

I liked Stella for the most part, although at times I just wanted to give her a good shake and tell her to woman-up a little, and Ruby was certainly the firecracker. I also liked Stella's sister, Jackie.

Then there are the negatives. Not really negatives as such, more disappointments on my part. Firstly, there could have been a lot more background on Ruby's family, which would have helped to paint the picture of why she behaved the way she did. Secondly, and probably my biggest issue with Torn is the ending. Too neat, too perfect, too many bows - it's nice to leave a book open-ended, but it shouldn't necessarily be an easy ending.

I think I'm sounding a bit more down on this book than I really should - even though for me it was flawed, Torn touches on some pretty sensitive subjects and does so with a fair amount of grace.
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Amazon.com: 3.9 out of 5 stars  36 reviews
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Realistic and Gritty tale of friendship 26 July 2012
By brandileigh2003 - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
This was such a realistic and gritty read! I could totally relate with Stella, the good girl from rough circumstances who gets drawn into a friendship that is all encompassing and more edgy than she's used to. We read all the time about boyfriends who influence girls' lives and take over the relationship in ways that are not so positive, but in real life, there are girlfriends that can do that too. (This isn't BLGT by the way. I'm down with that, but that's not what I meant so no one gets wrong idea.)
It is a nice change to have a book that focuses more on friendship and family, because even though Torn does feature a romantic interest, it is not all consuming. Now, don't get me wrong I love a good romance, but sometimes it's nice to have a change of pace. But, anyways, back to Stella. I really admire how loyal she is, and how brave she is--the things that she does for Ruby in the end really are awesome, and I hope my friends would do the same for me if I were in that situation. I also really think highly of Stella in regards to her family. She is responsible, she complements her mom, and she looks out for her siblings. Stella is also stellar in how she deals with her boyfriend--I can't say a whole lot without spoiling, but I appreciate the writer having the guts to go there, and not keep everything peachy and predictable.
Ruby is well written too, she's wild and appears carefree. And I love how the layers are peeled from her little by little to show what makes her tick and what led her to be like she is. The way that she learned from her past and dealt with the bullying, well, let me just tip my hat.
Ms. Guerra's writing was solid, and the pace kept me interested the whole time, I didn't want to put it down, and wanted to know what would happen next.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars So good ... until the end 3 Jun 2012
By cupcake - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
Torn is an excellent example of a book that is excellent up until its final act, when it all falls apart.

Stella Chavis is a high school senior, seemingly content with her friends, family and future. Yes, she still suffers lingering affects of her father's behavior and abandonment of his family. And, yes, she has had the same friends since kindergarten, and she sometimes resents having to take care of her younger sister and brother. But life, for the most part, is good for Stella.

Until, in a frenzied burst, Ruby Caroline enters Stella's life.

Ruby is what we call Troubled. She dresses provocatively, smokes and drinks. She's also drawn to older boys, beginning with the Notre Dame students living in the girls' town of South Bend, Indiana. Through Ruby, Stella discovers that an occasional stiff drink helps you feel better, college boys are fun (Stella meets Mike, who becomes her boyfriend), and there is a lot more excitement to life than Stella has experienced.

But ...

There is always a but.

Ruby likes to get in a lot deeper trouble, is drawn to a much hotter flame, than Stella. Yet Stella can't stay away from her. She tells herself that Ruby needs her and her friendship, that she can't abandon her new best friend, even as she abandons the friends she's had forever. As Ruby sinks deeper and deeper, Stella is there, enabling her all the way.

What author Stephanie Guerra does well with this book is create fairly realistic characters. Ruby is a little over the top, but I've seen girls like her strolling the halls of the high school where I work. She's outlandish, but some girls are. And Stella is beautifully conceived. She does not realize she is mired in ambivalence until she meets Ruby, and her reaction to this enlightenment results in fairly typical high school behavior.

Peppered throughout Torn are gentle urgings to seek comfort in God. For example, when Stella talks to Mike about applying to Notre Dame, he tries to comfort her by saying that she will get in, if 'God wants you to, you will.'" Stella's response is one we understand: "Boy, I hated when people said that. Of course it was true, but what if God didn't want me to get in? Or what if my college career was too insignificant for God to worry about? That was a distinct possibility, too."

The story chugs along, with Stella feeling the push and pull of friendship with Ruby, as well as her relationship with Mike and her family. But then we get to the last few chapters, and this wonderful story just sort of wraps up, end of scene. It's almost as if Stephanie Guerra got tired of writing, or had a word count she couldn't exceed. The rationale behind the tidy resolution of Ruby's and Stella's problems is unsatisfactory. The weakest is the playing out of Stella and Mike's courtship. What happens make sense, but not Stella's apparent emotional distance.

The thing is, this book was really good up until the end. That's what makes it frustrating, and that's why it gets the three cupcakes it does. It's a disappointing conclusion to an otherwise engrossing novel.

Published on cupcake's book cupboard. @VivaAmaRisata
Thanks to NetGalley for the preview.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars A realistic, yet raw, look at teenage life. 5 July 2012
By kim - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Verified Purchase
This book is labeled as young adult fiction. I am not a young adult and rarely choose to read fiction. A friend of mine read this book and raved about it so I thought I would give it a try. It was awesome! I haven't read young adult fiction since the babysitters club and this was no babysitters club. The characters were strong and three dimensional and believable. The story and the situations were raw, but realistic. This book was entertaining, intelligent and relatable. I also think that parents of teen girls should read this so that they have a glimpse into the lives of so many girls today.
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