This blogger is a novel study on the book The House of The Scorpion by Nancy Farmer
Monday, 30 April 2012
House of the Scropion (Book Review)
The book House of the Scorpion by Nancy Farmer was
a very interesting book in my opinion. It tells the life of a boy named Matteo
Alacran and his struggles to understand himself. Because you see, Matt isn’t an
ordinary boy; he is a clone of a powerful drug lord called El Patron. Matt grew
up in small house in the middle of a poppy field strip in Opium, what used to
be part of Mexico. The story takes place in the future where technology has
advanced so much they are able to create clones and other amazing creations.
Matt has no parents though, he was taken care of by a caregiver named Celia,
who was pretty much a mother to Matt. Matteo Alacran is hated though, not
because he’s bad or mean, but because he is simply a clone. It seems that the
clones in this book have built up a shoddy relationship with everyone else. Everyone
hates Matt, except for Celia, Maria and El Patron, who loves Matt like he loves
himself, because Matt is himself. After being brought to the Big House, he is
treated like loyalty by El Patron and gets his very own body guard, Tam Lin. As
Matt continues to struggle on understanding himself, he and Tam Lin have become
quite the friends and went on various adventures together in secret. The
protagonist of this book is obviously Matteo Alacran, which you can tell very
quickly at the beginning of the book. His allies include Celia, El Patron and
Tam Lin. He does meet other people through out the book and you can find out
whether their allies or not with Matt. The Antagonist’s include Rosa and Tom,
who probably hate Matt the most. The book was very well written in my opinion;
each character had their own original and different personalities and interacted
with each other very well. One thing that was really good about the book was
how Nancy Famer didn’t give the personalities and look of each character
immediately. Instead she gradually built up each character looks and
personalities with little descriptions through out the book. The book also had
rich sections that included some great action and suspense. At the end of each
chapter, it always ended with a cliffhanger that made you always want to read
on and never stop. The book also demonstrated lots of rich and descriptive
language and made the scene very clear of what was happening inside the book.
To me, the book started slow but slowly built up and was really good during the
middle, it continued this way all the way to the end but I was kind of
disappointed at the very ending. The very end sort of just dropped from all the
action and suspense, which kind of disappointed me. Another thing that I though
Nancy Famer did well in the book are twists. There are a lot of twists in the
book that shock and surprise you; I thought that this was a really good aspect
to the book that also helped keep the readers attention. Overall, this was a
very good book in my opinion; it included many of the factors that make a great
book. I would give this book a 9/10.
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John
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SCROPION! LOL!
ReplyDeleteJohn, thank you for this review and your assessment of so many of Farmer's choices. Your critique reflects the depth to which we explored the text. I encourage to you focus on incorporating more precise supporting details into your work to back up your assertions.
Well done!
Also - use paragraphs to organize your work! Even in a blog post!
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