Tuesday, 14 May 2013

[A276.Ebook] PDF Ebook Adrift, by Paul Griffin

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Adrift, by Paul Griffin

Adrift, by Paul Griffin



Adrift, by Paul Griffin

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Adrift, by Paul Griffin

From critically acclaimed writer Paul Griffin comes a fast-paced young adult novel about five very different teens lost at sea with no one to count on but each other.

Matt and John are best friends working out in Montauk for the summer.� When Driana, JoJo and Stef invite the boys to their Hamptons mansion, Matt and John find themselves in a sticky situation where temptation rivals sensibility.� The newfound friends head out into the Atlantic after midnight in a stolen boat.� None of them come back whole, and not all of them come back.

  • Sales Rank: #208564 in Books
  • Published on: 2015-07-28
  • Released on: 2015-07-28
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 8.50" h x .90" w x 5.70" l, .0 pounds
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 240 pages

From School Library Journal
Gr 9 Up—Matt and his childhood friend John have summer jobs in the Hamptons before their last year of high school. The summer has gone well, and there are only a few weeks left before school starts again. Matt will return to the selective public school in Manhattan that he has attended since freshman year, and John to the neighborhood public school. Matt hopes to get into Yale, where he wants to major in forestry so he can man a solitary outpost away from people. John wants to get his certification as an electrician like his father. Hoping to make some extra money on their day off, the boys take a couple coolers and fill them with sodas and ice cream bars and head to the beach. They meet Driana, Jo�o, and Estefania. What should have been a brief and anonymous exchange alters their lives when Driana invites them to a party she's having. Estefania decides to go out surfing at midnight and thus begins a tragic series of events. Clues about the characters are revealed in a leisurely manner, leaving readers to guess about their true intentions. This contrasts with the rapidity in which the plot progresses, evidenced by Matt's immediate willingness to help people he met only a short time before. VERDICT Recommend to teens who enjoyed Matt de la Pe�a's The Living (Delacorte, 2013) and other survival stories.—Suanne B. Roush, formerly at Osceola High School, Seminole, FL

Review
* "[Will] haunt readers as much as the lethal injuries, worsening weather, class friction, and psychological instability the teenagers face." -- Publishers Weekly,� starred review

About the Author
Paul Griffin loves being out on the water—in a boat with a working engine. Once, when he was a kid, his uncle's leaky old boat stalled. He was adrift less than an afternoon and in the relative safety of Long Island Sound, but this was scary enough to get him looking for higher ground. Now he lives in northern Manhattan, two hundred and fifty feet above sea level. He wrote the novels Ten Mile River, The Orange Houses, Stay With Me and Burning Blue, all for young adults. (paulgriffinstories.com)

Most helpful customer reviews

4 of 4 people found the following review helpful.
Fast-Paced, Compelling & Surprising: Spot-On Summer Read for Middle Graders & More
By jv poore
Reading Adrift is like floating on the ocean, basking in the sun one minute; being tugged under icy, churning waters the very next. It’s a kick-ass story delivered in an almost detached voice, packing a powerful punch. It’s gritty and raw, in a naturally understated kind of way. The story of two guys living on the border of Brooklyn and Queens with summer jobs in Montauk, selling cold drinks and ice-cream on beaches starts quickly, gaining momentum as it unfolds.

The brother-like bond between the boys is easily evident early on. Subtle suggestions of a shared, sinister moment are intriguing. An impulsive gift of slightly melted Klondike bars to three strangers (one of which is a beauty with a heart-stopping, crooked smile) immediately integrates two very different worlds and forces them to embark in a volatile, enthralling, seafaring expedition.

“Five of us went out on the water that night. None of us came back whole and not all of us came back.”

The story is, quite simply, stunning. A cunning confirmation of the importance of perception is rare and remarkably well done here. Reaching conclusions quickly, accepting the “obvious” answer when studying only one, very limited, view can be disastrous. The snippets of correspondence among law enforcement, searchers and rescuers interspersed with the narrative are shocking and scary in their simplicity.

Mr. Griffin weaves a wicked good tale; flirting with foreshadow while revealing bits of the characters’ past, creating a web of questions, confusion and abruptly apparent answers. With a diverse cast of captivating kids, an epic and mysterious escapade-turned-mission, and authentic dialogue, Adrift will have mass appeal. Appropriate for the Middle-Grade reader but too broad to be limited, Mr. Griffin’s upcoming survival story will be an awesome addition to anyone’s Summer Reading List.

This review was written for Buried Under Books Blog.

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful.
Griffin offers readers a bang-up adventure story, full of all the immediate and pressing drama of survival.
By Teen Reads
As I was reading Paul Griffin's new novel ADRIFT, a news story was unfolding --- two teens disappeared from the Florida coast while out in a small boat. That real-life drama, as well as the author's admission that some of the events in ADRIFT were inspired by his own teenage misadventures, makes the seemingly larger-than-life premise of the novel seem perhaps not so outlandish after all.

Matt and John, two working-class Italian-American best friends from Queens, are working in the Hamptons over the summer to make some extra spending money. When the boys wander over to a private beach in the hopes of selling ice cream bars to the wealthy, Matt immediately hits it off with the beautiful Driana, who, at a party later that night, introduces him to her cousin Stef and Stef's boyfriend JoJo, both from Brazil.

Stef is as bold and impetuous as John is cold and distant, so when she "borrows" a Windsurfer late that night and takes it out on rough seas, no one is really surprised. Still, the four other teens know that they're going to need to help her get back on dry land. When their haste, combined with Stef's carelessness, results in their small boat drifting off shore without enough gas to get back to the mainland, it's just the start of a two-week odyssey that will leave none of the teens undamaged or unchanged.

As the drama among the desperate teens plays out aboard the boat, readers gradually learn that Matt and John have been through trauma and tragedy before --- could this new ordeal be a chance for them to remedy the horrible things that happened then? Or will the same bad decisions that led to that tragedy just come back to haunt them now?

The teens' harrowing adventure plays out one day at a time, interspersed with police transcripts that chronicle the increasingly unlikely attempts to find them alive. They'll encounter sharks and hurricanes as well as more prosaic enemies like dehydration and starvation --- and they'll constantly be wondering who, if anyone, they can trust.

Parts of ADRIFT can verge on the predictable (the teens who survive, for example, are exactly the ones you would expect to do so) and contrived (each of the teens seems well-prepared to deal with some aspect of survival, be it medical assistance, desalination or fashioning a harpoon). But parts are anything but predictable or contrived, particularly the relationships between Matt and John and between Matt and Driana, both of which prove far more complicated than most readers might expect. In ADRIFT, Griffin offers readers a bang-up adventure story, full of all the immediate and pressing drama of survival. But ADRIFT is simultaneously a story about survival of a different kind, about living through trauma and finding ways to live with oneself afterwards.
Reviewed by Norah Piehl

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful.
A frightening, dark tale of survival, the ocean, and the human condition, in the tradition of The Lord of the Flies.
By Autumn
Title: Adrift

Author: Paul Griffin

Age Group: Teen/Young Adult

Genre: Survivalist Fiction

Series: N/A

Star Rating: 5 Out of 5 Stars

I borrowed this book from my local library and reviewed it.

Did you enjoy Lord of the Flies when you had to read it in school? How about Hatchet? Survival stories in general? Compelling, often frightening characters forced into often brutal situations? If you answered yes to any and all of these questions, you need to go get Adrift immediately. Shut off your phone, your TV, lock your doors, get comfortable with a drink and a snack, and read this book.

You won't regret it.

I'm sorry to tell you guys this, but I haven't seen the ocean in person. Outside of the internet and pictures, I've never experienced it. And because of that, it kind of scares me a little. Between what could be lurking beneath the glossy cerulean waves, as well as the sheer mass of it, it's terrifying. But there's definitely a part of me that longs to see it, to smell it, to stick my toes in the sand..

Reading this book was like living in one of my worst nightmares. One of my librarians suggested it and ordered it for me, and now I've been bitten by the bug. I need more survivalist stories, please! I just love the creepy factor. The way the author ratchets up the fear makes me excited and paranoid all at once, and I dig it, especially if it's done well. (I honestly think I've found a new favorite author in Griffin, too..)

Matt and John, best friends but more like brothers, if not by blood, then by circumstance. They meet Driana, an exotic, beautiful girl, and her cousin, Stef, caustic and wild, and then there's Jojo, the merry, gentle giant. At a party, they all end up on the beach together. When Stef takes a midnight ride on her windsurfer out to sea, Dri, Jojo, Matt and John all go after her in a boat--and some end up paying with their lives.

This book was done so well. A momentary encounter with three rich kids, worlds away from John and Matt, ends up changing the lives of them all forever. I was seduced by this dark, creepy little read within the first few chapters, and as the night went on, I found myself feverishly turning pages, glued to the dark prose. As the group of teenagers, desperate and frightened, drift further out to sea, the tension begins to mount--how will they survive? Will they keep their sanity? Who will be the first to have their brain crack like an egg?

The prose of this novel was perfect--tense and terse, descriptive and darkly beautiful. I fell in love with this author and I will be looking for more of his work as soon as possible. But where Griffin really shines is his characters. There's Matt, struck by love at the worst possible time, and driven by a protective instinct he doesn't quite understand. And then there's stoic, silent John, a stalwart, steadfast survivor willing to do almost anything to get out of this mess alive. Dri, the poor little rich girl, who has just as much of a connection to Matt, Stef, the wild one who started this journey in the first place, and Jojo, a gentle soul--until things begin to get hard.

This book was a wonderful, but often dark, journey into the human survival instinct. How anyone can be who they really are, and then change the moment they feel as if they are about to die. Griffin raises an interesting question with Adrift: Is anyone really themselves, even when their own life is on the line? The bottom line: A wonderful meditation on the human condition and the scary situations one choice can bring on, Adrift is a blockbuster hit of the summer--a survivalist tale that recalls Lord of the Flies--simply amazing! Next on deck: The Wishing Spell by Chris Colfer!

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