Read advance reader review of Wrecker by Summer Wood, page 4 of 4

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Raising Wrecker by Summer Wood

Raising Wrecker

A Novel

by Summer Wood
  • BookBrowse Review:
  • Critics' Consensus (4):
  • Readers' Rating (54):
  • First Published:
  • Feb 15, 2011, 304 pages
  • Paperback:
  • Sep 2012, 304 pages
  • Rate this book

About This Book

Reviews


Page 4 of 4
There are currently 25 member reviews
for Wrecker
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  • Kristen K. (Atlanta, Georgia)
    Wrecker
    This book features a wide cast of characters all scarred from events in their past. A non-traditional family forms. The book explores the concept of family and how a family can be a source of healing and wholeness for its members. Some might think the concept is too pat—damaged people healed by a damaged child named Wrecker but I was engaged by the book and loved following Wrecker’s journey from baby to young adulthood. I believe there are many interesting discussion topics for book clubs to explore.
  • Gigi K. (Lufkin,, TX)
    Family life
    This read of a different type family was sweet but did not make me want to pick it up. Wrecker is an adoption story that turns out well but was definitely a book I did not mind putting down at the end of each chapter.
  • Tracy T. (Wakefield, RI)
    Wrecker
    I didn't know if I had miscalculated the time I might have to read/review the book or was it that I just wasn't drawn in by the book. Fortunately, once I found the time I was able to appreciate the story of Wrecker and the eclectic group who come to love and care for him. Most characters have depth and soul and allow the reader to invest in and care about the fate and future of Wrecker. It is a lovely book with pace, poignancy and plenty of heart.
  • Denice B. (Fort Bragg, CA)
    Wrecker
    Wrecker, a novel whose premise had given me great hope, was a disappointment. This story of a boy raised among a small household of unrelated people in the wilds of Humbolt County could have been so much deeper. I read the writer's words, but didn't hear individual voices from the underdeveloped and almost interchangeable characters; perhaps the story would have have been more engaging if told from the boy's point of view. Luckily, it was written simply so was easy to get through.
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