Born to Rock by Gordon Korman
September 9, 2006 — Mary Childs
What a fun book! Leo, 18 and happy to be accepted to Harvard, now looks back on the events leading up to why his scholarship to Harvard was taken away.
When Leo was 10, an upcoming trip to Canada gave him an opportunity to see his birth certificate and to find out the person he thought was his father…wasn’t. Marion X. McMurphy was his father–Marion in this case being a guy’s name. This shook up his world a little, but not as much as when he found out who Marion X. McMurphy was…the lead singer of the ‘80’s punk rock band Purge. Yes, and now all these years later, Leo’s mom was desperate to keep all this a secret.
There’s so much in this book for you to find out, like how did Leo, who was a member of the Young Republicans, get caught up in an ethics charge that would jeopardize his scholarship, how did he get hired to be on the road crew for Purge’s summer revival tour, and what will happen to Leo’s plans for going to Harvard?
Gordan Korman’s books are always funny, but I really enjoyed the humor in Born to Rock, especially how Leo’s mom coped with Leo learning about and meeting King Maggot–Marion X. McMurphy. Now I have to go back and read Son of the Mob–I hear that one is good, too.
This is one of the preview books our district gets from book publishers. We then read them and write a short review that goes back to the publisher. This is a first book in what looks like a coming series called the Gallagher Girls adventures. The Gallagher Academy for Exceptional Young Women is outwardly an exclusive girls’ school but is really a front for a spy school. All subject matter taught at this school, including advanced encryption, covert operations and instruction in 14 languages, is designed to develop the girls into well-trained spies. At this point I couldn’t help make the comparision with Hogwarts, but it’s definitely without the depth of a J.K. Rowling book.
As the author of the Among the Hidden books, Haddix usually writes books that have a science fiction edge with an undercurrent of danger and intrigue, and her characters always seem to be in peril in some way. In Double Identity, a clue is in the title. Bethany suddenly finds herself in a car with her distraught parents on their way to stay with Aunt Myrlie, whom she’s never heard about before. But then her parents disappear into the night, and Bethany can’t even call them anymore. And why do people keep calling her Elizabeth? Why all the secrecy and when is she going to get some answers?
As I was reading this book, I kept having the feeling that something bad was going to happen, but the way it ended really surprised me.