Wildefire

 Review

Common Sense Media says

Violent myth-driven debut OK for fantasy-loving teens.
greenON: Content is age-appropriate for kids this age.
yellowPAUSE: Know your child; some content
may not be right for some kids.
redOFF: Not age-appropriate for kids this age.
not for kidsNOT FOR KIDS: Not appropriate for kids any age.

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Quality
 
Sometimes media can be age appropriate but a real waste of time. Our star rating assesses the media's overall quality.

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What parents need to know

Parents need to know that this coming-of-age fantasy features teens with paranormal abilities. Teens should be prepared for some violence: The body count begins in the earliest chapters, and later in the story, protagonist Ash witnesses several deaths, including those of people very close to her. There is also some decidedly PG-13 language, and adolescent lust, romance, and even a high-school pregnancy. Even so, readers might find a role model in refreshing Ash: she's brassy, smart, self-confident -- and loyal.  And they will learn a thing or two as well: The second half of the book turns into comparative mythology 101

  • The second half of the book turns into comparative mythology 101 -- the gods and goddesses from various cultures and some of their attributes and origin stories are pivotal to the plot.
  • Readers get the idea that family can mean more than who you are related to by blood. Ash's Blackwood friends have unconditional love for one another, which endures through times of trouble. 
  • Ash can be tough, sarcastic, and sometimes petty and mean -- but she's also strong, powerful, and disciplined. She also shows her loyalty to her friends by helping to protect them even when her life is on the line.
  • From the opening scene, when Ash is set to fight the girl who hooked up with her boyfriend, there's a lot of violence in the story. Characters are killed or injured in a variety of paranormal ways -- being struck by lightning; impaled; aged prematurely and swallowed by the earth; crushed by a falling building; and engulfed in flames (just to name a few). Besides the body count, Ash and her good friends are often fighting rivals and would-be kidnappers and generally running for their lives.
  • Ash is with three different guys in the course of the story. She's a jealous girlfriend and appears to know what she wants from a guy. She describes herself feeling "hot" or "lustful" over her objects of affection. There's some passionate and even horizontal kissing and making out, as well as the regular flirting and dating involving secondary characters. One pair is revealed to be "friends with benefits," and a girl calls a guy a "prude" and "dud in the sheets." A high-school girl admits to getting pregnant after her one-and-only sexual encounter. 
  • Typical adolescent cursing, including "bitch," "s--t," "assh--e," and insults like "slut," "loser," "crazy-ass," and the like.
  • Ash notices and calls out various brands from time to time: Gap, Coach, Marc Jacobs, Honda, Buick, Ford, etc. 
  • The boarding-school teens frequent a local bar, drink on and off-campus, and spike some punch with vodka at the Spring Week masquerade. Ash and her friends are near drunk on a couple of occasions.

What's the story?

Ashline "Ash" Wilde already stands out by being the only adopted Polynesian student in an affluent, all-white New York high school. When her estranged, intimidating older sister Eve comes home and ruthlessly kills Ash's school rival, Ash escapes from her East Coast troubles by boarding at Blackwood Academy, a posh prep school in Northern California. There, a mysterious encounter draws her to five other students. And that's when Ash's real adventure begins: Together, the group discovers they're able to do unbelievable things like control the weather or others' minds. In fact, they may not even be human. 


Is it any good?

 

Readers may find strong Ash a refreshing protagonist: She's not a shy wallflower waiting for a cute boy to help her blossom. Ash knows she's hot stuff, whether she's beating an opponent on the tennis court or flirting with a guy on the dance floor. But she's not sure who -- or what -- she really is for most of the book, and that makes her appealing -- at least when the pace picks midway through the book.  

Unfortunately, other characters aren't so well-drawn: Scary big sister Eve is one-dimensional as the unabashed "bad girl," and the author doesn't develop Ash's friends enough to care too much when they're put in harm's way.  First-time author Knight's writing suffers from some clunky prose and unanswered plot holes, but once the action takes off, fantasy-loving teens will be guessing and wanting more -- and hoping for another installment.

 


What families can talk about

  • Families can talk about the popularity of mythological characters in books and other media. What other titles can you think of? What's lasting about these characters? 

  • Compare Ash to other popular heroines in young adult books. Is she typical -- or unusual? Thinking of media as a whole, are there more diverse female characters today than there were in the past? 


This review was written by Sandie Angulo Chen

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This review was written by Sandie Angulo Chen
Author:Karsten Knight
Book type:Fiction
Genre:Fantasy
Publisher:Simon & Schuster
Publication date:July 26, 2011
Number of pages:400
Hardcover price:$16.99
Publisher's recommended age(s):14

This review was written by Sandie Angulo Chen
 

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About our rating system
ON: Content is age-appropriate for kids this age.
PAUSE: Know your child; some content may not be right for some kids.
OFF: Not age-appropriate for kids this age.
Learning ratings
BEST: Really engaging, great learning approach.
GOOD: Pretty engaging, good learning approach.
FAIR: Somewhat engaging, OK learning approach.
NOT FOR LEARNING: Not recommended for learning.

 

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