A Separate Peace

A Separate Peace

3.52 of 5 stars 3.52  ·  rating details  ·  89,031 ratings  ·  3,361 reviews
Gene was a lonely, introverted intellectual. Phineas was a handsome, taunting, daredevil athlete. What happened between them at school one summer during the early years of World War II is the subject of A SEPARATE PEACE.

A great bestseller for almost a decade–-one of the most starkly moving parables ever written of the dark forces that brood over the tortured world of adol...more
Paperback, 196 pages
Published 1969 by Bantam Books, Inc. (first published 1959)
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Amanda
I recently re-read this book for the AP class that I'm teaching and I was reminded of what a deceptively simple book this appears to be on the surface. Set in Devon (an all boys prep school) during WWII, A Separate Peace explores how the encroaching reality of war affects the psychological and social development of all the boys attending the school. The poignant irony of providing these young men with a classics based education at a prestigious school just to be sent into war to kill and be kill...more
Mariel
Apr 17, 2013 Mariel rated it 3 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: Gene genie lives on his back
Recommended to Mariel by: BirdBrian's ghost
All of them, all except Phineas, constructed at infinite cost to themselves these Maginot Lines against this enemy they thought they saw across the frontier, this enemy who never attacked that way- if he ever attacked at all; if he was indeed the enemy.


The book cares who is watching. Gene knows you are watching. Move in for an embrace, over the shoulder a good old boy smile. You know how it is, how it was. There we all were...

Confession? I don't place a lot of value in confessionals. If you wan...more
Jeffrey Keeten
>"And the rays of the sun were shooting past them, millions of rays shooting past them like--like golden machine-gun fire."

Gene is a boy from the South attending an exclusive New Hampshire prep school. He becomes best friends with a New Englander from Boston named Phineas. Let me amend that, Phineas chooses Gene as his friend and any thoughts that Gene has of being friends with anyone else are quickly dispersed as he is pulled into the shimmering chimeric world according to Phineas.

"The winte...more
Matthew Klobucher
This book had a profound and lasting impact of me. It is a short, exquisitely crafted story narrated by a talented but unconspicuous boy who is jealous of his best friend, Phineas--who is athletic, beautiful, and kind. Phineas stands tall as the prodigy of American prep adolescence. He is simple; he is likeable; he has panache; and he is virtuous. His greatest crime to the narrator, though, is his love. For though the narrator is jealous and resentful that of his authentic golden-boy friend, he...more
Whitaker
This is an American classic? Why? Now I’m not saying that it’s a bad novel. I just don’t see how it’s a particularly great one.

Perhaps, it’s ultimately because the book never worked to make me identify with the situation where the event took place. Instead, the entire conflict felt contrived. We are told of an atmosphere of driven competition in a school where everyone is an enemy and no one a real friend. But except being told so by Gene no one else in the book seems to notice this. I can imag...more
The Library Lady
I remember this book distinctly because seldom have I hated a book more.
In addition to being a depressing piece of work, it is about as relevant to kids today as a 45RPM single (that's something we had before CDs, boys and girls). Why are they still putting it on reading lists? What fan of John Knowles has been paying teachers to force this on the kids?
Kristy
I had to read this book in 11the grade English. I hated it. I had to read it again in college. I still hated it. I don't know why everyone thinks it's so great. Please, explain the appeal to me!
Rachel
I remember viscerally hating this - I found it incredibly boring and I don't think anything really happened except a whole bunch of wank about being a moron and running and a paragraph lovingly describing a side character's butt. I don't even know.

Furthermore, it was for eighth-grade English. My teacher gave us a quiz on some random detail-bits, and I remembered little things like how many years had passed between Point A and Point Boring, and that somehow meant that I wasn't actually UNDERSTAND...more
Monk
Nov 23, 2007 Monk rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: Lit-lovers, Those Coming of Age
Most people would list the Catcher In the Rye as the ultimate coming of age story, but I beg to differ. For me, my coming of age book was A Separate Peace. It was required reading - we were not given a choice on reading it. Unlike prior assigned reading books, I actually READ this one.

I wish I could remember more of it.

What I do remember was that I liked it. It's about a boy growing up at a prep school, making friendships and planning futures provided the war ends and that they aren't all drafte...more
Callista
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Ed
My first novel.

Tiring of typical grade school fare I surreptitiously ordered A Separate Peace from the "other side" of the monthly Bantam book order form - unbeknownst to my Mother and my teacher. As grade school and high school books were shipped intermingled I plucked my order from the school shipment the moment the boxes were opened. Before I even opened the book I sensed that if I wanted to finish it, I better do so secretly.

I had no trouble reading the piece from a vocabulary standpoint b...more
Rhonda
I hadn’t thought of writing a review of this book until I read how many people disliked it. Far from wanting to simply "prove" others were wrong, I began thinking about why others might not like this book and its message. First, it is somewhat legitimate to dislike anything one must read in high school. However, if you never get past that point, life isn't much worth living. If you never come back and read some of the things on your own, you just aren't much of a human being. Rant as one will ag...more
Chris
Jun 15, 2008 Chris rated it 3 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommended to Chris by: one of my teachers, way back when
In sophomore year of high school, “A Separate Peace” was on the ‘required reading’ list. Thus, it was practically guaranteed I’d either never read it, or wouldn’t read it during my four years corralled with my peers being brainwashed with the same routine gibberish. I’ve never cottoned to the concept of someone telling me what I must read; I’ve always enjoyed the discovery of a new book outside the standard fare chosen by nimrods of school boards which is shoveled down the throats of the masses....more
mary
this book devastated me.

i read it in high school, like most people. it was the year with all the "classics" that everyone has read at some point in schooling, all depicting young adults in various stages of angst or 19th century high drama or epic poems. whatever.

but this book gave me such a strong physical reaction - i sobbed and felt ill through so much of this story. i think i related too much with the characters for my own good, and the psychological slap-around of the evil in every person...more
Logan Loring
Nov 30, 2007 Logan Loring rated it 1 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: people who enjoy reading
Shelves: done
Book Review: A Separate Peace
By Logan Loring

The book A Separate Peace by John Knowles, isn’t a book that I think is worth reading.
Throughout the many parts of the book there aren’t many scenes that are exciting or jump out at you. If there are any exciting scenes, then there are very few of them. If you’re thinking about reading a book with the school story genre then A Separate Peace isn’t the book you should choose. In this book there are some new scenes every now and then, but when that new s...more
sj
The boy I was totally in LUUUUUUUUUUUUUURVE with my Sophomore year in high school? This was his favourite book. And by favourite, I mean...

He lived several hours away, but we wrote each other letters every day. We also played this game in our letters where we'd draw out song lyrics or book titles and the other would guess...and then the person who'd originally drawn the damn thing would have to remember what they'd been talking about in the first place to be able to tell the other person if they...more
Koeeoaddi
If I read this now, I might agree that it's a fabulous book. But, see, it's about kids at a boarding school. When I was required to read it I was a kid at a boarding school. I reserve the right to nurse my nearly four decades of hatred for that reason alone.
Chris
It is entirely possible that, were I to reread this today, it wouldn't rise to the lofty height at which it hazily soars within the literary shrine of my memory. But back in the day I thought that Knowles had crafted a powerhouse story that punched a number of those buttons—including that of the precariousness of forming and framing an image of oneself in relation to another—dialed directly into the heart and soul of a teenage boy, especially one with the experience of itinerancy and thus an acu...more
Jim
One of the few assigned books in high school that I actually liked. It helped that I was in a school much like the one mentioned. Finny supplied us with several tricks that were perfect for bored, boarding school students, which added to the interest, of course. What drew me most to this book was that it captured the experience so well.

I've heard the novel disparaged because it's about a bunch of whiny rich kids. Obviously there's a lot of truth there, but these people miss the point. While pri...more
Becky
I remember this book, as so many others do, as being Required Reading in 8th or 9th grade, I can't recall which. But I never read it in school. I read surprisingly little in school, it seems. That's alright though, more time for reading what I enjoyed.

I'm glad that I read this as an adult. If I had read this in school, there probably would have been a week-long analysis of the book, which I think wouldn't have been necessary. An afternoon discussion would have sufficed.

There were some good poi...more
Manuel
I LOATHED this book. I was required to read this piece of crap when I was a sophomore at Carmel High.
When you are in high school, you are required to read many books as part of a required reading list. Often times, you groan when you pick up something that looks like it will be a chore to read, but in the end the book will have a semblance of value. Many books will entertain you or at least you can say you learned something new. I didnt enjoy reading the "The Scarlet Letter" or "Billy Bud", but...more
HRH
Oct 20, 2007 HRH rated it 4 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: thoughtful folks
I'm the kind of kid who always wanted to go to boarding school and be mischevious. This book is about as close as I ever got to fulfilling that dream. It takes place at a boy's preparatory school in New England in the early 1940s. Narrated by Gene Forester, a sort of Nick Carroway type but with passion, it tells the story of Phineas, a charismatic, good-hearted athlete who turns Gene's education into the sort of memory one looks back on with longing and maybe a tear. Phineas makes up new sports,...more
Amanda
Sep 05, 2008 Amanda rated it 1 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: nobody
Recommended to Amanda by: TPR
Shelves: read-in-2008
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Tressa
I always read my older brother's required reading books long before I was assigned them, and for some reason this book spoke to me even though I've never been to an ivy league prep school and I'm not a boy. I had this book memorized by the time I reached 10th grade.

A wonderful study of the conflict between a naturally gifted and well-liked young man and the jealous friend with low self-esteem. A great book that teaches a moral code that one should live by and the ability to finally let go of the...more
Jake C
Jun 02, 2008 Jake C rated it 1 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: knowone
Recommended to Jake by: Mrs.
This book was very boring and hard to pay attention to. It was mostly taken back in World war two. It conflicts with envy and jealously. I really didn't like this book because it was hard to get into it and the whole plot of the book was very dry and empty.

I suggest this book for people who really get into books easy and like books about childhood maturity and about stupid mistakes. This book does not have any intense parts. The climax is very weak. A very random even happens which is the climax...more
Jonathan
A friend recommended this and even loaned me a copy to read, so my expectations were high. Unfortunately, it did not come close to my expectations. What could have been a story of the transition from adolecence into adulthood and the acceptance of responsibility (as I know some people see it), I just saw it as a story of a selfish boy. Rather than taking responsibility for his own actions, Gene chose to follow every whim of Phineus, yet still secretly loathed him.

In my opinion, a much more compe...more
Jemmuel
A Separate Peace was a great read from beginning to solemn end. It captured my attention and brought a giant foreshadow right from the start. I felt that this book would be a great read from its introduction.

This book, written by John Knowles, is beautifully written, and tells a story about Gene, a boy of 17, at the time of the Second World War, and reaching the age of enlistment with his other pals at a boarding school called Devon. He is best friends with Devon's most outgoing, and possibly...more
9charlottes
A Separate Peace by John Knowles is a book with ongoing struggles of the war and friendship. A Separate Peace is unlike any book I have ever read. It demanded a complicated understanding of two characters and the relationship between them. As the war continues on, their friendship changes as well. John Knowles created an extremely interesting plot and wrote it with such detail that it was never dull. The way John Knowles wrote was descriptive and alluring. John Knowles' writing was effective on...more
Julie
Mar 29, 2008 Julie rated it 1 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: no one
This is the only book I had to read in high school that I hated. Usually I could find something to enjoy in all the books we read, but I hated this book. I'm not exactly sure why but to this day I get a shudder down my spine when I see a copy.
angrykitty
i don't remember when i read this, but i know that i've been lucky in that i haven't had to teach it. i do remember it being very boring, and that even though it creates an opportunity to show dead poets society, it's not worth it.
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Finny's fall- accident? 32 217 May 05, 2013 11:11pm  
all time favorite classic 5 59 Jan 03, 2013 09:41pm  
Do you feel like you understand the text at a deeper level? Why or why not? Be specific. 13 86 Dec 18, 2012 09:10pm  
A Separate Peace (Paperback)
A Separate Peace (Paperback)
A Separate Peace (Paperback)
A Separate Peace (Mass Market Paperback)
A Separate Peace (Mass Market Paperback)

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John Knowles (September 16, 1926 - November 29, 2001), b. Fairmont, West Virginia, was an American novelist, best known for his novel A Separate Peace.

A 1945 graduate of the Phillips Exeter Academy in Exeter, New Hampshire, Knowles graduated from Yale University as a member of the class of 1949W. A Separate Peace is based upon Knowles' experiences at Exeter during the summer of 1943. The setting f...more
More about John Knowles...
Peace Breaks Out Phineas Indian Summer The Paragon: A Novel A Stolen Past

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“I felt that I was not, never had been and never would be a living part of this overpoweringly solid and deeply meaningful world around me.” 94 people liked it
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