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Cruise Control

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

How sick is this: I'm the major jock-stud in high school, but my brother has the brain of a badminton birdie and a body to match. I've got everything and he's got nothing. I'm a three-year, three-sport letterman and Shawn can't even stand up! Like I said, sick, huh?

It's hard to be a brother to someone who doesn't even know you're there. How can you talk to him when he can't understand a thing you say? How can you listen to him when he can't speak a word? How can you love him when he's so messed up, he can't love you back? And how can you have a life of your own when your father bailed on the family, leaving you to be the "man of the house"?

Fueled by rage at what has happened to his family, Paul is ready to explode. And he is haunted by something even worse—something he can never tell anyone. It is something he will have to face if he is to have any hope of a future at all. While Cruise Control is a companion to Terry Trueman's Printz Honor book, Stuck in Neutral, it is the completely independent story of a family's "other" son—the one who is healthy, gifted, normal. It is a courageously hopeful story told with power, compassion, and humor.

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  • Reviews

    • Publisher's Weekly

      November 1, 2004
      In Cruise Control by Terry Trueman, narrator Paul, brother to Shawn, the subject of Stuck in Neutral, takes center stage. His direct rapport with readers ("My only brother is a veg. Yep, a full-fledged, drooling, fourteen-year-old idiot") lends an immediacy to Paul's struggle with having a brother who suffers from cerebral palsy and the father who abandoned them. .

    • School Library Journal

      January 1, 2005
      Gr 7 Up -This companion to "Stuck in Neutral" (HarperCollins, 2000) can stand alone. The first book is narrated by Shawn Daniel, 14, who is so profoundly developmentally disabled that he cannot walk, talk, or otherwise communicate, and he has frequent seizures. His older brother narrates this book. Paul is a straight-A high school senior who is also on the football, baseball, and basketball teams. He feels guilty not only about being so talented, but also because he is ashamed of his brother, whom he truly loves. Paul is deeply angry with their father, a Pulitzer Prize-winning poet who left the family years earlier, and finds himself taking out his rage in fights with others. His journey is one of self-realization; as he leads his school's basketball team to the state championship, he learns that he is really angry with himself because of his conflicted feelings about Shawn, whom he is certain cannot think or feel anything. This powerful tale is extremely well written and will give readers an understanding of what it's like to have a challenged sibling." -Marlyn K. Beebe, City of Long Beach Public Library, CA"

      Copyright 2005 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • The Horn Book

      January 1, 2005
      In this sequel to "Stuck in Neutral", basketball star and high school senior Paul McDaniel examines his out-of-control anger and comes to a better understanding of both his estranged father and his severely handicapped brother. Despite some patchy writing, this rather unsubtle character study will interest readers of the earlier book.

      (Copyright 2005 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

    • Booklist

      March 15, 2005
      Gr. 7-10. In this companion to " Stuck in Neutral " (2000), Trueman revisits the story of Shawn, the developmentally disabled teen whose point of view made that first novel so memorable. This time the narrator is Shawn's older brother, Paul, a gifted athlete. The irony of the family situation is not lost on Paul ("what a sadistic madman God must be to have thrown Shawn and me into the same family"). While Paul loves his brother, he hates their father, who, unable to cope, has abandoned the family. But Paul, like Shawn, is a victim of circumstance, and Trueman does a passionately convincing job portraying a boy who feels trapped and suffocated by responsibilities he never asked to shoulder. As he puts it, his life is "like a car roaring down the freeway in cruise control . . and I can't even slow down." Only at the end does the story stray briefly into wish-fulfillment territory, but by that time, readers will be so invested in Paul's survival that few will quibble. (Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2005, American Library Association.)

Formats

  • Kindle Book
  • OverDrive Read
  • EPUB ebook

Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:5.1
  • Lexile® Measure:810
  • Interest Level:9-12(UG)
  • Text Difficulty:3-4

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