Grab Super 8: The Sequel To Smog City Formulated By Rebecca McNutt Edition

Smog City, Rebecca McNutt established a brilliantly original premise concerning the personification of pollution sites juxtaposing their relation to the earth and its inhabitants with their relation to the aging process of a troubled youth eager to hang onto the best of the nostalgic past as a modern world seeks to forget its roots, and in the sequel, Super, Rebecca McNutt continues the legacy with all the thematic orchestration of a wellcrafted stage play and the tangible color palate of an everevolving and rapidly decaying Nova Scotia.
Forging deeper into the mystery and conflict of both character and plot and the plight of societal degradation, only to end with a rare balance of poignant reminiscence and possible hope, Superviews broad subjects in narrow perspectives, allowing them to be thoroughly explored before pulling the lens back to see the big picture once again.
It is impossible to read any of Rebecca McNutt's works without getting a movielike experience from them and finding yourself contemplating social issues and personal beliefs, and Super, especially after reading Smog City, is no different.
I am honored to have inspired her as an author in any way and am honored by her considerate dedication in Superand hope to continue reading her work as she spreads her wings and flexes her cinematic muscles writing unique and original material.
Sysco Volumesto ispages, perversely awful writing, and very much like being stuck inside the mind of an angry, resentfulyear old.
At that age I, too, thought romance was yucky, fat people were just gross and lazy, and killing was a simple, straightforward solution to all sorts of problems, because death and all sorts of grownup problems werent real to me yet.
In other words, there are reasons this book was SO bad, and read like really sloppy bad anime the author is ayrold, full of herself and convinced she has all the answers.


As a book one would read for entertainment, I would not recommend this, or the first half of the Sysco series.
It might, however, be useful reading for teachers and psychologists working with preteens and young teenagers, as a way of immersing themselves in the mindset of the kids they work with.



I received my copy of this book free in exchange for a fair review, Let's just
Grab Super 8: The Sequel To Smog City Formulated By Rebecca McNutt Edition
start by saying that the ending hit me EXTREMELY hard, Rebecca, you had me at the verge of tears!!! I'm not going to put any spoilers here, but just be prepared for near the end and the ending.
Especially if you love Alecto as much as I do, Expect the worst, that way you'll never be disappointed, . .

Everybody has secrets they'd rather forget, but Cape Breton photojournalist Mandy Valems is swimming in them.
A year earlier she was helping to save the life of her best friend a hazardous waste site and wondering just what led to the dissolution of her family when she was a teenager.
In, after being rejected by a large writing agency, she's decided to come back to the little steel city of Sydney and leave her traveling career abroad behind.
Alecto, her best friend and a guard of the Sydney Tar Ponds toxic waste site in Cape Breton, meets up with her again and in prose and short chapters, their adventures are recorded with all the color and vibrancy of an old home movie.
As Mandy faces the truth about who her popular older brother was and what she's repressed, Alecto has to deal with the truth about his guardian, Mearth, who happens to finally be trying to understand him.
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