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The wealthy enclaves north of San Francisco are not the paradise they appear to be, and nobody knows this better than the students of a local high school. Despite being raised with all the opportunities money can buy, these vulnerable kids are navigating a treacherous adolescence in which every action, every rumor, every feeling, is potentially postable, shareable, viral.
Lindsey Lee Johnson’s kaleidoscopic narrative exposes at every turn the real human beings beneath the high school stereotypes. Abigail Cress is ticking off the boxes toward the Ivy League when she makes the first impulsive decision of her life: entering into an inappropriate relationship with a teacher. Dave Chu, who knows himself at heart to be a typical B student, takes desperate measures to live up to his parents’ crushing expectations. Emma Fleed, a gifted dancer, balances rigorous rehearsals with wild weekends. Damon Flintov returns from a stint at rehab looking to prove that he’s not an irredeemable screwup. And Calista Broderick, once part of the popular crowd, chooses, for reasons of her own, to become a hippie outcast.
Into this complicated web, an idealistic young English teacher arrives from a poorer, scruffier part of California. Molly Nicoll strives to connect with her students—without understanding the middle school tragedy that played out online and has continued to reverberate in different ways for all of them.
Written with the rare talent capable of turning teenage drama into urgent, adult fiction, The Most Dangerous Place on Earth makes vivid a modern adolescence lived in the gleam of the virtual, but rich with sorrow, passion, and humanity.
Praise for The Most Dangerous Place on Earth
“Alarming, compelling . . . Here’s high school life in all its madness.”—The New York Times
“Unputdownable.”—Elle
“Impossibly funny and achingly sad . . . [Lindsey Lee] Johnson cracks open adolescent angst with adult sensibility and sensitivity.”—San Francisco Chronicle
“[A] piercing debut . . . Johnson proves herself a master of the coming-of-age story.”—The Boston Globe
“Entrancing . . . Johnson’s novel possesses a propulsive quality. . . . Hard to put down.”—Chicago Tribune
“Readers may find themselves so swept up in this enthralling novel that they finish it in a single sitting.”—Publishers Weekly (starred review)
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Creators
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Publisher
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Release date
January 10, 2017 -
Formats
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Kindle Book
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OverDrive Read
- ISBN: 9780812997286
- File size: 1331 KB
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EPUB ebook
- ISBN: 9780812997286
- File size: 1623 KB
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Languages
- English
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Reviews
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Publisher's Weekly
Starred review from August 15, 2016
Welcome to Mill Valley, “endowed with not only green mountains and gold hillsides, but also redwood forests, canyon waterfalls,” just over the bridge from San Francisco in affluent Marin County. It’s hardly the most dangerous place to grow up, but in Johnson’s excellent debut, her sharp storytelling conveys an authentic sense of the perils of adolescence observed through a group of teenagers complicit in a terrible event back when they were all in middle school: the suicide of a classmate beset by cyberbullying after sending a love note. The group, now high school juniors, is seen through the eyes of Molly Niccol, a young new English teacher from outside Fresno, a “nowhere place between beige strip mall and brown farmland.” Molly is anxious to connect with her students; she’s not so far removed from her own teen years, when she felt the same “claustrophobic rage that she could not explain to anyone... there was no clear reason why she should be in any particular moment so furious, so bored. ” Molly struggles to make sense of the kids in her class and the rumors about them she hears in the teachers’ lounge, like ambitious Abigail’s affair with a teacher, and the disappearance of Damon Flintov, one of the original middle school tormentors. Johnson allows these dramas to unfold through various shifting perspectives, including the texts and Facebook posts that run current to teenage life. She keeps the action brisk and deepens readers’ investment, culminating in high school party that goes wrong. Readers may find themselves so swept up in this enthralling novel that they finish it in a single sitting. Agent: Susan Golomb, Susan Golomb Agency. -
Library Journal
August 1, 2016
The most dangerous place on Earth? High school, and the students here include flaky outsider Callista; sexy star pitcher Ryan; Emma, a disciplined dancer who turns wild on the weekends; and Nick, the secretly shaky cock-of-the-walk party boy. Bought in a major preempt and sold to seven territories so far.
Copyright 2016 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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Publisher's Weekly
Starred review from May 22, 2017
In a wealthy California neighborhood, a middle school case of cyberbullying leads to tragedy. Three years later, the now-high-school-aged kids are each dealing with their own stresses and personal issues: average student Dave suffers from his Asian parents' insistence that he get straight As and become a doctor; Abigail falls into an affair with a predatory teacher; troublemaker Damon goes to mandatory drug rehab and struggles to get his life together. Campbell's narration is empathetic, layered, diverse, and nuanced. Every character has a distinctive voice, and her acting is spot-on, even when multiple characters are having a conversation. Her choices are well-thought-out and astute: in the initial chapter on cyberbullying, her voice is neutral and factual, which makes the horror all the more chilling. A Random House hardcover. -
Library Journal
October 15, 2016
A wealthy group of Mill Valley, CA, eighth graders causes the death of a fellow student when they engage in a relentlessly vicious bullying campaign. Morally anesthetized by privilege, peer pressure, drugs, alcohol, hook-up sex, and social media, the kids carry their behavior into high school after a collective, if short-lived (for most), period of regret. New high school English teacher Molly Nicoll, just a few years older than her students, gradually sees the erosion of her idealistic desire to fire them up with her love of literature. Her colleagues' cynicism, her own casual fling with a teacher who is breaking the law with one of her students, and her astonishment at the paths the kids take as they work their way toward graduation--from cheating on the SATs to get into the best schools to mansion-trashing to driving while impaired--all leave her reeling. VERDICT Johnson's polished debut novel puts a human face to the details of today's daily headlines of teen life. The characters' wildly risky behaviors are somewhat offset by their ability to excel academically, athletically, and artistically, if not emotionally. This bleak, potent picture will scare the pants off readers. [See Prepub Alert, 7/11/16.]--Beth Andersen, formerly with Ann Arbor Dist. Lib., MI
Copyright 2016 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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