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A sister's bond is tested through adolescence and even death;
the novel Dangerous Neighbors takes its reader on a journey
of sweetness and pain, beauty and grief along with twins Katherine
and Anna. Against the backdrop of the 1876 Centennial Expedition
in Philadelphia, the reader experiences the excitement of festival
as well as the grief Katherine feels following the death of her
sister. Flashback scenes hearken back to calmer and sweeter times
when Anna was still alive. In a fairly short historical novel of
166 pages, we observe the deep bond of sisters and the grief that
follows when that bond is shattered--first by a love interest and
then by the finality of death.
With prose verging on poetry and descriptions that make you feel
as though you are in the midst of the scene described, Kephart's
writing style is nothing short of delicious--so rich and smooth
you can almost taste it! At $17 for the hardback version, it is
worth your investment and delectably memorable. I enjoyed the way
that the flashbacks revealed the relationship between the sisters--showing
how Katherine protected, guarded, and brooded and how Anna flitted,
flirted, and coyly manipulated. The contrast between the twins'
personalities, their strained relationship as they grew older,
tantalizing characters that dart in and out of the storyline, vivid
descriptions of the Centennial fair--all of these elements culminate
in a finale of resolution, redemption, reconciliation, and even
renewed hope.
As much as I personally enjoyed the writing style and the subject
matter itself, this book does present some ethical and moral issues
that a Christian parent would likely find problematic. Theoretically,
the book could be pertinent for an adolescent who has lost a sibling
or close friend and is struggling with guilt or for someone who
is considering suicide. Despite its being touted as a "hot teen
title" by Booklist, I personally would not want my adolescent to
read this book because of the overarching theme of the protagonist
desiring (and nearly attempting) suicide. Also, with an aloof father
and a mother who is too busy with suffragette pursuits to invest
in relationships with her daughters, this book would serve better
as an example for parents of how not to act than as entertainment
for teens.
Product review by Melissa Cummings, The Old Schoolhouse® Magazine,
LLC, April 2011
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