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Cargando... Teen, Inc.por Stefan Petrucha
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Inscríbete en LibraryThing para averiguar si este libro te gustará. Actualmente no hay Conversaciones sobre este libro. Interesting concept, about a boy who is raised by the corporation that was responsible for his parents' deaths. Jaiden was a fairly realistic teenage boy, but the story could have gone more in depth into his life and the details of the story. The whole action only took place over a few days...it could have been stretched out into a fuller story. Short, but enjoyable. Jaiden Beale's parents were blown up in a freak accident caused by ineffective industrial standards. In an odd legal twist, the corporation responsible for his parents' death ends up raising him. And just like any product, Jaiden has to meet certain standards - good grades, social interaction, dating.... Awkward enough, but when his school crush turns out to be the daughter of an angry environmentalist, and his "parent" corporation is the polluting bad guy, Jaiden has to figure out what side he's on, and quickly. Thought-provoking, entertainingly told, and not too heavy. I can see this ending up on the big screen starring the latest Nickelodeon teen star pretty easily. Jason's parents were killed when he was a baby, and he is being raised by NECorp, the corporation responsible for their death. His life consists of board rooms and PowerPoint presentations on all kinds of topics, including how to meet a girl. When he's assigned to work on a science project, things become very complicated when his partner's father turns out to be an activist opposed to NECorp's corporate ways. Could there actually be truth to what he's saying? When Jaiden Beale was a baby, his parents were killed in an explosion caused by a faulty gas valve produced by NECorp. As part of the settlement, NECorp adopted Jaiden and he has been raised by the company for 14 years. His life is one long succession of meetings, focus groups, and memos. Just when it seems Jaiden's life might be semi-normal, he discovers a terrible secret about the company -- and has to decide whether to do what's right for NECorp or what's right for the rest of the world. This book offers lots of food for thought about corporate responsibility and what it means to grow up in a culture largely ruled by corporations and their ubiquitous brands. sin reseñas | añadir una reseña
Fourteen-year-old Jaiden has been raised by NECorp since his parents were killed when he was a baby, so when he discovers that the corporation has been lying about producing illegal levels of mercury emissions, he and his two friends decide to try to do something about it. No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca. |
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Google Books — Cargando... GénerosSistema Decimal Melvil (DDC)813.54Literature English (North America) American fiction 20th Century 1945-1999Clasificación de la Biblioteca del CongresoValoraciónPromedio:
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Jaiden Beale has never had a normal life or a normal family. Well, he had a mom and a dad -- that is until they were caught in an explosion at their home while heating up some milk, due to a wrongfully made gas valve by Safe Warm. NECorp, who was indirectly responsible for his parents' deaths, thought it would be right to raise Jaiden themselves, and to make sure that nothing bad happens to the company's money or reputation.
So now, not only is Jaiden's family a corporation, but also his home.
All he has ever wanted was for everything to be normal. But that doesn't really happen when you don't get to make all of your own decisions. The decision making belongs to NECorp and the time that runs Jaiden's life. Everything is decided through meetings and discussions and organized to where everyone knows Jaiden's business. He can't even find the perfect girl to date without Team Jaiden making slideshows and gathering all the information they can about possible candidates and the ones he should date.
When he does find the perfect girl, Jenny, his first date (well, study date) goes terrible wrong, since some of the corporation's lawyers think it's best for Jenny to sign some pre-nups that are more like waivers.
So what does Jaiden do when he can't stand how everything is working out? He runs away. Unfortunately, he doesn't run too far. That is until he finds secrets that could ruin his family and possibly be the missing puzzle piece for his freedom and his chance at leading a normal life. Will Jaiden use these secrets to take down the only family he's ever known? Or will he come to terms and finally understand that this family of his is what he needs the most?
Satisfying, unique, and very charming, TEEN, INC. is one of the very few novels in its genre that stands out the most. Jaiden is the one character that everyone will fall in love with, and NECorp is one family you don't want to mess with. Readers will have mixed responses on whether they would want to have a life like Jaiden's. Sure, having others make decisions may seem nice, but not all the time. And having any sort of family is the greatest, even if yours may be a corporation. Stefan Petrucha stirs up a novel that makes readers want seconds, and more after that. ( )