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Bang : a novel  Cover Image Book Book

Bang : a novel / by Barry Lyga.

Lyga, Barry, (author.).

Summary:

A new friend and their YouTube cooking channel help fourteen-year-old Sebastian move on from accidentally shooting his infant sister ten years earlier.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9780316315500
  • Physical Description: 295 pages ; 22 cm
  • Publisher: New York, New York : Little, Brown and Company, 2017.
Subject: YouTube (Electronic resource) > Fiction.
Guilt > Fiction.
Friendship > Fiction.
Dysfunctional families > Fiction.
Single-parent families > Fiction.
Young adult fiction.

Available copies

  • 1 of 1 copy available at Pemberton and District Public Library.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 1 total copy.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Holdable? Status Due Date
Pemberton and District Public Library Y LYG (Text) 31894000517994 Young Adult Fiction Volume hold Available -

  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2017 January #1
    Fourteen-year-old Sebastian lives in the past: when he was four years old, he accidentally shot and killed his four-month-old sister. This haunts him, leading to obsessive self-hate and suicidal feelings. He is waiting, in fact, for the voice in his head to tell him it's time to effect his end. That time seems imminent as his past and future seem to come together, faster and faster—until he meets Aneesa. The two become friends, bonding over a YouTube channel they create that features Sebastian making pizzas. As time passes, Sebastian finds himself falling in love and feeling a strange emotion: hope. "For her," he thinks, "For her, yes, I could stay." But does he deserve happiness, and what might happen if she doesn't return his feelings? Lyga manages his intensely emotional material well, creating in Sebastian a highly empathetic character, though his voice seems far too sophisticated for a 14-year-old. Nevertheless, the psychology that drives his decisions is acutely observed, and his story is highly memorable. Copyright 2017 Booklist Reviews.
  • Horn Book Guide Reviews : Horn Book Guide Reviews 2018 Spring
    Having lived with the knowledge that, as a four-year-old, he accidentally shot and killed his baby sister, Sebastian plans to commit suicide--soon. Aneesa, a new friend unaware of his past, makes him question this plan, and her experiences with bigotry (she is Muslim) expand his worldview. Lyga takes on grief, guilt, faith, prejudice, and gun violence in this moving page-turner. Copyright 2017 Horn Book Guide Reviews.
  • Kirkus Reviews : Kirkus Reviews 2017 March #1
    Ten years ago, when he was just 4, Sebastian accidentally killed his infant sister with his father's unattended handgun. Now a teen, he struggles to cope with the far-reaching effects of this horrific experience. Though on the surface they've moved on with their lives, Sebastian and his family are still lost in their grief. His father moved out many years before, and Sebastian and his mother have eked out a daily routine, but anguish underpins their every move. When his lighthearted, wealthy, white best friend, Evan, leaves for summer camp, Sebastian thinks that the time is almost right to end his own life, as he's long planned. However, the auspicious arrival of a new neighbor, Aneesa, changes things for him in ways he couldn't have predicted. Rich characterization anchors this explosive novel, from white Sebastian's likable, brainy, but at-times acerbic intensity to Aneesa's upbeat, intelligent kindness. Aneesa is Muslim—her dad is Turkish-American—and she and S ebastian discuss everything from Islamophobia to their families to how to turn his pizza-making hobby into a YouTube Channel. If such details as Sebastian's love of all types of antiquated pop culture seem odd to some teens, they are rooted in his deep desire to turn time back, and there will be others who appreciate these genuine quirks. Regardless, readers will root for him to find some sort of peace. Heartbreaking and brutally compelling. (Fiction. 14-18) Copyright Kirkus 2017 Kirkus/BPI Communications. All rights reserved.
  • Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 2017 February #4

    Ten years after accidentally shooting and killing his baby sister, 14-year-old Sebastian is haunted by the loss to the point of considering suicide. When he meets Aneesa, a new neighbor whose brown skin and headscarf also make her an outcast, their friendship challenges his views of his self worth. Suddenly, Sebastian is making pizzas for their YouTube channel and not solely focusing on feeling like a pariah, "the kid who killed." But he can't outrun his past, and a climactic revelation is a gut punch, returning to the agonized and primal feelings that are essential to this gripping story. Lyga (The Secret Sea) expertly scatters reminders of Sebastian's burden in benign, tossed-off phrases (of friends with siblings: "half the time it's like they just wish they could kill them"), the prominence of first-person shooter games, and his best friend's father's prized gun collection, each of which reveals another facet of his trauma. It's a raw exploration of persistent social stigmas, a beautiful study of forgiveness, and an unflinching portrait of a parent's worst nightmare. Ages 12–up. Agent: Kathleen Anderson, Anderson Literary Management. (Apr.)

    Copyright 2017 Publisher Weekly.
  • School Library Journal Reviews : SLJ Reviews 2017 February

    Gr 10 Up—When Sebastian Cody was four years old, he accidentally shot and killed his infant sister with his father's gun. A decade later, in the summer before his sophomore year in high school, he can no longer endure the guilt, everyone's knowing and nervous stares, and the constant feeling that he doesn't deserve to be alive. Sebastian decides to take his own life at the end of the summer in the same way that he took his sister's. Knowing it will all be over soon is a comforting, relaxing thought—until he meets Aneesa, a Muslim girl who has moved in down the street. Aneesa is funny and smart, and, most important, she knows nothing about Sebastian and his horrible past. Together they create a YouTube channel about making pizza, and as they spend more and more time together, Sebastian begins to feel as if there is something left to live for. However, when kids from school start viewing the channel, they recognize Sebastian and leave comments about his sister's death and make crude Islamophobic jokes about Aneesa. A wedge is driven between the two friends, and Sebastian is once again headed toward a destructive end. Lyga (I Hunt Killers) tackles a number of relevant issues in this heartbreaking novel, including gun control, suicide, and religious and racial prejudice. The pain and anguish Sebastian feels every day are raw and chafing, and the chemistry between Sebastian and Aneesa is tender and realistic. With a number of sensitive issues addressed, along with frequent graphic language, this book may be best for a mature audience, who will fully appreciate the unwavering and stark realism.

    Copyright 2017 School Library Journal.
  • Voice of Youth Advocates Reviews : VOYA Reviews 2017 April
    When Sebastian was four years old, he shot and killed his baby sister. That accident has colored all aspects of his life ever since. For ten years, he has been going through the motions of living. He and his family are stuck, trapped by the tragedy that marks them. His father left years ago; his mother is barely present; and Sebastian plans to escape the guilt, grief, and pain the same way he entered it, with a gun. As summer stretches before him, with his only friend out of town, Sebastian prepares to enact his plan. Then he meets Aneesa, a Muslim girl in his neighborhood, and their friendship opens the door to change. Bang draws readers in from the first page and holds them captive. The varied structure, authentic teen thoughts and reactions, and Sebastian's dark inner voice set the pace and deftly disclose layers of truth throughout the book. Although the story is heartrending and raw, most readers will laugh as well as cry. As with previous titles, Lyga excels at helping readers step into an outsider's shoes, and many will connect with Sebastian's social awkwardness and struggles. Readers see relatable teens navigating life and death, love and friendship, stigma and belonging, and having fun. Messages about timely topics like gun control, Orwell, and Islamophobia occur naturally, not didactically, in the novel. While some pieces wrap up too neatly, readers know Sebastian will always be shaped by what happened. They are, however, left with a glimmer of hope that his life might not be completely engulfed by the tragedy.—Cheryl French. 4Q 4P J S Copyright 2017 Voya Reviews.

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