The Shadow Club
by Neal Shusterman
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Publisher: Dutton Juvenile
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Practical Jokes Gone Awry (2007-07-01)
Jared, a ninth-grader, is so sick of always being the second-best runner on his team. No matter how hard he pushes himself, he is always beaten by Austin. To make things worse, Austin loves to rub it in when he beats Jared.
Jared’s best friend Cheryl knows how he feels. Her cousin Rebecca, who is a year younger than her, is a better singer than Cheryl and she seems to be constantly rubbing Cheryl’s face in that fact. Jared and Cheryl are both fed up.
When they feel they can’t take it anymore, Jared and Cheryl decide to start a secret club to vent their feelings–The Shadow Club. They invite Cheryl’s little brother Randall, who is the number two swimmer on his team. They invite the second best trumpeter, the second prettiest girl in the class, the second best basketball player, and the second best student to join.
All of the members of the club get together and at first aren’t sure what to do besides say bad things about those who are beating them all of the time. Then they decide that more needs to be done. Jared comes up with the idea of playing practical jokes on those students they detest. He thinks if no one knows about the club and no one plays a joke on his or her own enemy, all of the club members will escape being suspected of playing the jokes. So it starts.
Green slime shows up in a trumpet before a big solo. The best student’s pet tarantula is put in the hood of the best runner’s sweatshirt. The best swimmer has his toenails painted bright red while he’s asleep.
The members of the Shadow Club are thrilled with their accomplishments. But then things start getting out of control. Jokes are being played that no one seems to know about, and they are getting meaner and more destructive by the day. Could someone be trying to frame the members of the club?
I thought this book captured the attitude of many junior high school students–it highlighted the feelings of competition and the petty nastiness that occurs in students of this age. I thought Jared should have been able to see when things were getting out of control, though, and should have been able to stop the club before anything bad happened.Wow… You got to read this book!!! (2007-05-25)
The Shadow Club
By: Neal Shusterman
Review done by: A Mid-Prairie Teen Student
You would have no idea what you would be expecting if you got a book titled The Shadow Club, I sure didn’t. The Shadow Club is a great book having middle school to high schooled aged students making mistakes and seeing the consequences in the end.
Jared, a middle school aged kid, is the main kid in this story. He is the second best runner in his school and hates being second best. He absolutely hates Eric, the best runner in school, and would do absolutely anything he could to be better than Eric. This is where the trouble started.
Jared’s friend Cheryl, the second best singer, wanted to start a club called the Shadow Club. This means for people to come to this club if they’re second best in something. Like second best singer, second smartest person in school, and even second prettiest girl in school. All these second best kids formed this club and got themselves into trouble without even knowing it.
This is quite a story and it is written by Neal Shusterman a fantastic author. He is an American author of books for young readers, and also a screenwriter. He has won and award called the Boston Globe-Horn Book Award for The Schwa Was Here, and he was born and raised in Brooklyn, New York. He now lives in Orange County, California with his four children. So as you have seen he has a busy life but he has certainly used some of his time to write great books.
This is an amazing book but I’m not going to tell you what happened in the end. Once you read it, it will shock you incredibly as you will see. I will tell you though that it teaches great things like making friends, the trouble you can get yourself into with just starting little things, and how much hate can really hurt someone else’s life.
I dare you to read this book even if you think you’re the best person in your school. Just go and read this book so that you can see the secrets some second best people may be thinking right now.
My favorite book to read aloud (2006-07-29)
I have been reading the Shadow Club to my 7th graders for more than 10 years. The humor, especially in the character of Ralphy Sherman, keeps the class listening. The suspense builds to the point that I have students begging me not to stop reading. Many students tried to buy the book because they just couldn’t wait for me to finish reading. I was happy for a few years that it was out of print, so they couldn’t find it to read ahead of me.
There are many lessons that apply directly to children of middle school age, and my favorite is looking at how the students laughed at Tyson McGaw at the beginning, but feel for him at the end of the book. Hopefully they will look closer at individuals and not make fun of them because they are different.
I have never had a student who didn’t like this book and it is the only one that I have read that when I finish, the students applaud.The Shadow Club (2006-07-19)
There are the winners, the people who are first all the time, never losing. Then there are the second bests, almost coming in first. That is what the book ‘The Shadow Club’ is all about, beating the best.
Jared Mercer is the second best runner, second best to Austin Pace. This Austin teases him everyday, until one day, it’s too much. That was the start of the Shadow Club.
Jared and Cheryl, best friends, decide on five other people to be in their club. Randall is the second best swimmer, Jason, the second best trumpet player, Abbie, second most popular girl, Karin “O.P.” Han, second smartest, and Darren, the second best basketball player. They play small, seemingly harmless pranks - painting the swimmer’s toenails, giving out pages of the most popular girl’s diary - but then someone listens in on a meeting, Tyson McGaw. Tyson is a foster child with no friends. Then when someone starts to frame hime, things go spiralling out of control Tyson is all to blame. But are things really how they seem?
Shusterman is a great writer. You can really relate to the book which has a ton of detail. It keeps you on the edge and so does the following book, ‘The Shadow Club Rising’.
~ADWhen Revenge Goes a Little Too Far… (2006-02-24)
Meet the second-bests: a group of kids who, although they have one thing they’re best at, still get beat daily by the “unbeatables.” Although these kids are good kids, well-behaved, smart, athletic, interesting, their lives are being ruined by those who always seem to be one step ahead, stealing the limelight and rubbing it in until you just wish they’d never been born.
Thus is the basis for THE SHADOW CLUB, a secret group of seven kids who decided to get back at those who make their lives miserable by playing harmless pranks on them–pranks that will embarass them before their admirers, and give the second-besters their just due.
Except revenge, as revenge always seems to do, comes back to bite you in the butt. Pranks start getting out of control, even though they’re not being comitted by the Shadow Club members. Someone’s out to sabotage their club, and one of the “unbeatables” could wind up getting seriously hurt–even killed. As the Club seeks to get the biggest loser in school, Tyson McGaw, to confess to the pranks, the Shadow Club comes to realize that they might not be the all-around good kids that they thought they were.
What started out as fun is turning into something darker, and no one seems to know how to make it stop.
THE SHADOW CLUB is a great read by Neal Shusterman. Dealing with human nature, the fact that kids can traumatize each other more than anyone else can, and the fact that we all have anger inside of us is forefront in the story. A great read!
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