Imagen del autor

Obras de Rita Arens

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Nombre legal
Arens, Rita
Género
female
Nacionalidad
USA
Lugar de nacimiento
Iowa, USA
Lugares de residencia
Kansas City, Missouri, USA
Educación
University of Iowa (BA, communications studies), University of Missouri - Kansas City (MA, English)
Ocupaciones
editor & writer
Agente
Eric Myers (The Spieler Agency)
Biografía breve
Rita Arens is the author of the young adult novel The Obvious Game and the editor of the parenting anthology Sleep Is for the Weak. She lives in Kansas City with her husband and daughter. For more info or to request bookplates, visit www.ritaarens.com.

Miembros

Reseñas

A collection of short essays about motherhood. Some are funnier than others, but none are total losers.
 
Denunciada
wealhtheowwylfing | otra reseña | Feb 29, 2016 |
"I was terrified of never feeling happy
again. I was scared of losing Jesse. I was scared of killing myself. I didn’t know if I could stop. I didn’t know if I could not stop.
I didn’t, actually, know anything about myself. "
—Diana

I didn't actually know what to expect when I first read the blurb of The Obvious Game, so when I knew that it was mainly about anorexia, I was a bit pessimistic. I never read any anorexia-related novel before. But this book totally changes my perceptive. And I glad it did.

The Obvious Game told us about the everyday life of Diana Keller, how she struggled with her mother who had cancer, how she kept up with her friends Amanda, and how she dealt with her past as an overweight kid and was mocked because of it. But when Jesse, a new boy from Kansas City, moved in, everything suddenly changed for Diana. That's when her past decided to come back and haunt her once again. And this time, she had to choose, whether to fight it, or run away from herself.

The plot of this book was actually quite great. It was fast-paced, and I like how not one part was meaningless and sagging, but rather advancing the story even more. Every chapter ended in such an interesting way it made the readers craved for more and more, curious about how it all would ended. I love how the problem seemed to pile up more and more, creating a great tension, and then it all resolved in such a beautiful way. The ending was satisfying too, with all problem solved, and all well ends well. And the concept for The Obvious Game, the game which was originally between Diana and her friend Seth of stating the obvious thing, was quite funny and original as well.

Diana Keller, as our main character, was actually pretty believable. I could totally feel her emotion throughout the book, when she was happy, sad, struggling with her life, etc. She was not all perfect too, which made it easy for readers to relate to her. One thing I loved very much from her was that she represented teenage girls these days perfectly. As a teenage myself, I could really feel what she feel, and yes, everyday we live with insecurities of not being good enough for the society. And Diana sounded just like a true teenage girl.
Jesse, Diana counterpart as well as her first love, was well-developed as well. I love how he could understand Diana's situation perfectly, because he too, had a brother who died from cancer. And not like any other male protagonist out there, Jesse didn't stick around when things got rough, which may be insulting for some readers, but interesting to me actually. It's just so like the real world, where not many people might stick up when his girlfriend got into trouble. I love how Arens made her characters pretty flesh and bone and not just following the stereotypes.
Lin, Diana's soon-to-be friend, was very likable as well. She didn't have any major part early on the book, but when things start to get rough for Diana, the world eventually shown her who her real friend truly was, and that was when Lin started to be something in Diana's life. I love how she was so mature and composed, and she accepted things the way it is, with no complain and whatever.

One thing I'm not quite fond of this book was the character of Amanda, Diana's friend.
Even though most of the character of this book was shaped perfectly with believable flaw and personality, Amanda totally was another story.
I didn't really like her, mainly because she was simply a brat. she did anything however she want, and she totally didn't care about anyone around her. She also acted without thinking first, and then apologized later like it was no big deal, when she didn't know how big the damage she had cause. it's actually okay for an annoying best friend to have this trait, but what made it hard to like her was that she didn't have any redeeming trait at all.

Overall, if you would like to read something that deals with teenage's world : their life, love, insecurities, friendship, betrayal, and a whole lot more, you should definitely give this a try.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
NeysaKristanti | 2 reseñas más. | May 5, 2013 |
Despite the fact that I don't have any kids, I really enjoyed reading this book of blogs by mommies & one daddy. I even laughed out loud at a few parts. Since it's composed of blogs, it would be easy reading even for a busy parent.
 
Denunciada
JillKB | otra reseña | Apr 4, 2013 |
The Good Stuff

This one was a real challenge for me to read as it is way too close and personal. It's funny how I can speak so openly about wanting to kill myself while suffering with post partum depression but the thought about even discussing this makes me break out in sweats. This girl was almost me and it hurt to read about those same emotions I had and all the stupid shit I used to do to my body. I was very lucky that it never got this far, but I won't lie, it was very close. Even to this day, I am a healthy slimish girl, but will always see my self as the fat girl I used to be
Heartfelt, honest and realistic
Nice uses of humour at just the right moments
nice mentions of faith without being too preachy
Realistic scenes of teenage life
For anyone who has ever suffered from this type of disorder you will understand how true to life this tale is (For example I also cut up all the pictures of me when I was overweight)
hopeful message
Parents are realistic and damaged but never hurtful or stupid like in many YA novels
This isn't your preachy issue book like some of the stuff I read back in high school but a raw and honest account of all the emotions and actions of someone who is suffering. No tied up neatly after school special type of story

The Not So Good Stuff

There are some spots were it jumps around and is disjointed. Hard to explain this late at night but there were a couple of spots were I had to go back a couple of pages to reread and make sure I hadn't missed something (but take this with a grain of salt -- I am a speed reader and this happens quite frequently to me)
Man if Amanda was my friend I would slap that self involved narcissistic girl right across the face
Very raw at times that I felt myself tearing up and wanting to hug the old teenage me

Favorite Quotes/Passages

"Plus, people don't really notice when you're doing half the time anyway. They're too busy worrying about themselves."

"The first cut felt smooth, the blades slicing through gleaming photo paper, just the right amount of resistance. I took quite a bit off my butt and thighs, slightly less around my calves. My breathing slowed as I worked, as though my transformation were already happening."

"Everyone trusted me. Good old dependable Diana. Which was why most people didn't notice at first that I was in trouble."

Who Should/Shouldn't Read

All mothers of girls so maybe you can truly understand some of the signs
Any tween or teen
Those who have suffered or suffering from an eating disorder - a good reminder that you are not alone and it will get better
A must have for every junior high, high school and public library

4.5 Dewey's

I received this from Rita Arens in exchange for an honest review
… (más)
 
Denunciada
mountie9 | 2 reseñas más. | Feb 28, 2013 |

Estadísticas

Obras
3
Miembros
45
Popularidad
#340,917
Valoración
4.1
Reseñas
5
ISBNs
6