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Legacy

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A powerful coming-of-age novel about a seventeen-year-old girl who joins a radical environmental movement in the Pacific Northwest.
Ever since her older brother Andy died, Alison's life has been just as dark as her home in Tacoma, Washington.

Her mom is in perpetual mourning, her father ran out on them, and after hanging out with Andy's hard-partying friends for a year, Alison's reputation is trashed. She planned on taking the path of least resistance during her senior year—hanging out with her punk rocker boyfriend and trying not to flunk out of school—until a massive fight with her mother pushes her over the edge, and she runs away.

At first, joining a group of radical environmentalists who are occupying a Washington State forest is just about having a place to crash. But the ancient woods prove to be as vibrant and welcoming as they are vulnerable, and for the first time, Alison realizes that she might be more powerful than she thought. As tensions in the forest mount and confrontations with authorities get physical, Alison has to decide whether she's willing to put her own life on the line to fight for what she believes in.

In this stunning literary work, Jessica Blank uses the anti-establishment and radical mood of the 1990s to show a girl grappling to find the strength and courage to do what's right . . . for the world . . . and for herself.
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    • Kirkus

      May 15, 2018
      Can a group of young adults make a difference when it comes to protecting an area from environmental disaster?Alison feels like she has no one in the world but her boyfriend, Jeff. After her brother, Andy, dies in a drunken driving accident for which Alison feels responsible, her parents fall apart, and she turns to her brother's friends for comfort, which comes in the form of sex. School isn't much better. Alison doesn't fit in with the crowd and has gained a rough reputation because of the aforementioned sex with her brother's friends. But when she and Jeff join a Free State, an activist community of people trying to save old-growth Douglas fir trees from being cleared, she finally feels a part of something larger than herself. Even as relationship problems and tragedy plague Alison and her allies, they stay committed to their purpose. A somewhat overly earnest narrative offers white-presenting characters that often feel dichotomous and flat. The pacing is energetic for most of the book yet fizzles toward the end. Discussions about the potential futility of saving a tiny patch of forest feel staged, and Alison's guilt over her brother's death and redemption through activism explore no new ground.A tepid book with goals as lofty as a Douglas fir. (Fiction. 14-18)

      COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • School Library Journal

      July 1, 2018

      Gr 8 Up-Alison has always come second to her seemingly perfect brother, Andy, who is charming and makes a good impression without even having to try. After a split-second decision and a drunk-driving accident take his life, Alison finds her own life just as dark as the city of Tacoma. Her mother is in denial and spends her days mourning the loss of her son, and Alison's father has disappeared, leaving her to deal with her misplaced guilt and without any supervision. Alison runs away with her punk-rocker boyfriend and his friend Dirtrat. At Dirtrat's suggestion, they head toward a Free State occupation in a Washington State forest where they have a place to crash for the night. But as Alison learns more about saving the forest and finds that she truly has a voice of her own, she must decide what she's willing to risk to fight for what she believes in. VERDICT Girl power and the right of resistance of the 1990s make this book a relevant choice for readers looking to have a say in the world and affect change.-Stephanie Wilkes, Good Hope Middle School, West Monroe, LA

      Copyright 2018 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • The Horn Book

      July 1, 2019
      Allison's world has been upside-down since her brother died. She runs away with her boyfriend and ends up at an occupation protesting the logging of an old-growth forest in Washington State. There Allison discovers her strengths, what to let go of, and what to protect at any cost. Set in the 1990s and based on real protests, this is an affecting story of resistance and coming of age.

      (Copyright 2019 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

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  • English

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