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Reviews for Real World

 Real World magazine reviews

The average rating for Real World based on 2 reviews is 3.5 stars.has a rating of 3.5 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2018-02-12 00:00:00
2008was given a rating of 2 stars Regina Shores
I really wanted to like this one (especially after reading and enjoying Grotesque) but unfortunately this one just didn't work for me. The book centers around a teen nicknamed Worm- who we learn very early on, kills his mother. Four female friends decide to help Worm out while he's on the run and the book details these interactions. The actions of these characters seemed ridiculous- they seemed so bored or sick of their lives, that they were just looking for something to do. I must say that while I enjoyed the ending, this isn't a book I'd recommend-it was just too unrealistic for my liking.
Review # 2 was written on 2011-01-28 00:00:00
2008was given a rating of 5 stars Michelle Martinez
When I said that this book is intense, I might have understated a bit. Imagine, if you will, that you have stepped into the heads of four very different teenage girls and one, probably insane, teenage boy. Kirino's Real World gives you a closer look at reality than you might have wanted to get. The books explores issues of blatant materialism, consumerism, how contemporary society seems to be fervently buying, selling, consuming and asks what the effect of this is on children. Society has turned into a huge business transaction and everyone is competing. Worm, whose mother is constantly pushing him to be more and more successful, who feels that he is but a puppet being manipulated by his mother, kills this same mother and feels a fierce elation at having done so. There is no remorse whatsoever in any of the pages of this book. None at all. And then there are the girls who are titillated by this boy who has rebelled against the rules of the society. They interact with him through the phone, in shabby hotels, seeing themselves reflected in his run from the law, see him as a saviour and as a manifestation of their own suppressed desires. Real World is, I reiterate, intense. It is both an introspective and extroverted endeavor. It delivers both in an intellectual capacity and a physical one (as in there is plentiful action). The conclusion is shocking and thought provoking. I really liked this novel. I don't think there was any distance from the themes it discusses to what is true about Western society. I think that materialism and consumerism are issues found in all societies of first worlds. What is fascinating is how it shapes minds and thus society. I recommend this to you.


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