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Reviews for What about Bettie?

 What about Bettie? magazine reviews

The average rating for What about Bettie? based on 2 reviews is 5 stars.has a rating of 5 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2014-08-05 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 5 stars Christopher House
Although this book was sad I really enjoyed it. Its one of those books which its short, to the point, and that you make a connection with. I liked that the book was written in one-person perspective and that it was also written in a journal entry form. It created a more true story feel and it became a way of copping with someones death. I also liked that the book was written in a eleven year old point of view but in a way that teenagers wont get bored of reading. If the book was made into a movie I think that it will have a nature feel, very outdoors, with many flashbacks from the main character, something between "Bridge to Terabithia" and "August Rush". The movie would be a drama movie. I think that William North, the main character should be played by Freddie Highmore, (Evan Taylor in August Rush ). I think that the setting would be very forest like, somewhere like in North Carolina. I know that directors and screen writers will have to diverge form the book, because its somewhat short. I think that the story will market PG-13.
Review # 2 was written on 2013-05-15 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 5 stars Lou Diamond
You know how sometimes you start a book when you're a kid and then you spend years trying to find it again and when you finally do it's not anywhere near as cool as you remembered? Too bad. It shouldn't happen, but it does. "Wenny Has Wings" is one of those books that never quite lives up to its potential. The idea is strong, there are many good elements, but the execution is somehow underwhelming. When I was 12 or 14 the voice worked just fine for me, but reading it now I have trouble connecting to Will. Instead of cynical, he just sees kind of whiny and childish. Carey just has a difficult task of not only telling the story in a child's voice, but staying within the limits of a child's writing capabilities. I know my prose wasn't too good when I was 11, and boys tend to be less expressive than girls the same age. It's just a hard style to pull off. The plot seemed a little rambling to me somehow, even though there were interesting symbolic things like the tree house, the tunnel of death, and the father's photographs. I tended to get annoyed with the over-reactive parents and the rather stereotypical kids at school. Sometimes it's just all a little too obvious. You know Will is going to tell someone about his near death experience eventually. I just feel like it could have done better, like there was this postmodern, mystical, lyric, coming-of-age novel that was whirling around in the author's head and what came out was a simplified version of it.


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