Black Mirror

by Nancy Werlin

Other authorsCliff Nielsen (Illustrator)
Hardcover, 2001

Status

Available

Call number

F Wer

Call number

F Wer

Barcode

1277

Publication

Dial (2001), Edition: First Edition, 249 pages

Description

Convinced her brother's death was murder rather than suicide, sixteen-year-old Frances begins her own investigation into suspicious student activities at her boarding school.

Original publication date

2001

User reviews

LibraryThing member slightlyfan
Wow. This book was very boring and slow. I didn't feel that Werlin put as much into this one as she had to her other novels.

This book was said to be a page turner and a thriller. I really gave this book a try, but didn't find it that way. The real mystery didnt come in until at least half way
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through.

I really couldn't finish it. I will probably pick this book back up and try it again some day, but I really didn't find it thrilling or mysterious. I just found it boring and long.
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LibraryThing member kewpie
Frances and her brother attended an exclusive prep school on scholarship. While she didn’t fit in or feel comfortable, her brother had a large friendly group of friends connected to a charity organization. When he suddenly dies of a heroin overdose, Frances joins his organization to get to know
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his friends better. Instead of befriending them, she becomes suspicious that her brother might have been murdered – and the club was involved somehow in his the crime.
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LibraryThing member YAlit
There are many interesting issues for teens to explore in this book including identity, peer relationships, drugs, and family relationships. The story is a unique page turner and readers who love mysteries as well as those looking for a mixed race protagonist will especially enjoy this book.
LibraryThing member sharp3
Synopsis:After Frances’ brother Daniel committed suicide, Frances decides to honor his legacy by joining the charity organization, Unity Services, which Daniel worked with. Her act is largely born out of guilt for his death, because Frances felt that she was too wrapped up in her own depression
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and self-hate to notice that her brother was hurting. As Frances tries to integrate herself in with the other members of Unity Services, Daniel’s girlfriend Saskia starts a campaign to make Frances’ life at school unbearable in an attempt to force her to quit volunteering at Unity Services. At the same time Frances starts to notice that something isn’t quite right with the organization at Unity Services and begins to suspect that the charity organization is a front for an elaborate drug ring. Review:Werlin’s narrator (Frances) is extremely easy for teenagers and pre-teens alike to identify with. Her self-image and vacillating self-confidence makes her an ideal candidate for YA readers who need to know that their feelings are universal. That being said, I found the book to be an interesting read and enjoyed the vivid description Werlin uses to bring her world to life. Unfortunately, Werlin's narrator reinforces the image of the perpetual teenage girl who is consistently unhappy with herself.
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LibraryThing member kissmeimgone
Mesmerizing book that took my breath away. I just couldn't seem to set it down! I'd recommend this book to anyone. A murder mystery that keeps you guessing til the very end. =]
LibraryThing member bluemopitz
I love mystery novels, and this is a pretty good one. Parts of it were a bit too easy to figure out, but then the author threw in some great curve balls that kept me from figuring out who-done-it until the end. This book might be used in curriculum about finding yourself and feeling like an outcast.
LibraryThing member mirrani
I had a very difficult time putting down Black Mirror, not necessarily because I was held at the edge of my seat with suspense, but because the characters were so real that I simply could not let them go. Reading this book I felt as if I was listening to a friend tell the story of some intense
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drama that happened to them in the past week and the emotion behind the characters pulled me even deeper into the story.

The main character, Francis, tells the events as they happen, in the first person. It is her story, told I such a way that you can almost feel as if you picked up someone’s diary, opened to a random page and began learning about their life from that moment on. As is the case with everyone, things have happened in her past, before the book begins, however we are not bombarded with the details. We learn about them in mentions here and there; her Japanese mother left them to join a Buddhist monastery, her father moved the family to live with their Jewish grandmother, she grew up, her brother died. It is in this part of her life what we find her, feeling out of place as a part of a mixed family, going to a private school on a special scholarship. As a reader I became drawn to this self-proclaimed outcast, feeling her pain, her worries and experiencing her life /with/ her in these moments of confusion and sadness. She was close to her brother before they grew up, then he drifted away from her and now, with his death, she finds herself all alone with only her own art to comfort her.

As a mystery, the story moves you from one direction to the other. Is there a crime? Who is the guilty party in certain events? What has happened to some of the people she has seen in her time at the school? Some of these questions are answered as you might have expected, others might throw one surprise after another at you before you come to the book’s conclusion. And, as is true of picking up anyone’s diary and learning about their life by only reading part of it, there are events that occur in the book that you will not discover the outcome of. I found that most refreshing since, after all, doesn’t our life continue after the end of a major event? Do we not have our own questions to answer after we go to bed in the evening? Life continues and this book is a perfect reflection of the life of a person that you might have simply met at random, making discoveries that will forever change them.
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Rating

½ (47 ratings; 3.6)

Pages

249
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