What's the Name of That Book??? discussion
► UNSOLVED: One specific book
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Y/A Novel about mother and son that join a commune that turns out to be more like an evil cult and the children of the commune are severely abused
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Kristina
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Apr 29, 2020 08:22AM

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Here are descriptions of No Way Home by Marilyn Levy - Rainbowheart's suggestion - on Amazon. Should we mark your request as Solved?
"It's the summer of 1978, and Billy, 13, is spending six weeks in California with his mother, a member of a religious cult. Three years ago, the troubled woman abandoned him, and Billy has lived with his father ever since. The boy is sorry he agreed to the invitation for a reunion: he can't believe that this tired-looking, strangely dressed woman is his parent. Even more upsetting are the rituals of the commune she lives in: the pre-dawn chanting, spartan meals and rigid censorship of anything "Western." Escape seems impossible, as Billy resists with difficulty the brainwashing techniques of his captors, who transfer him to Denver, then France, while his worried Chicago family tries to locate him. Levy's riveting, poignantly humorous tale is well written, and her first-person narrative has the voice of a sweet Holden Caulfield (Billy's hero). Yet it's mystifying that Billy's intelligent father would permit this visit; equally bewildering is the youth's forgoing several possible opportunities to solicit help. Readers will see him through his predicament, however; this novel is hard to put down. Ages 10-up."
"Grade 5-8-- The dated theme--a child is kidnapped by a fanatic Hare Krishna-type cult of which his mother is a member--severely reduces this novel's appeal to today's readers. Levy does write a good novel, and the brainwashing of the teenage protagonist, Billy, by cult life is scary, and will draw readers in. Billy's mother is portrayed as a zombie, and his father and grandparents are fascinating, long-suffering people who care about their grandson and who go to great lengths to get him away from off-balanced people..."
"It's the summer of 1978, and Billy, 13, is spending six weeks in California with his mother, a member of a religious cult. Three years ago, the troubled woman abandoned him, and Billy has lived with his father ever since. The boy is sorry he agreed to the invitation for a reunion: he can't believe that this tired-looking, strangely dressed woman is his parent. Even more upsetting are the rituals of the commune she lives in: the pre-dawn chanting, spartan meals and rigid censorship of anything "Western." Escape seems impossible, as Billy resists with difficulty the brainwashing techniques of his captors, who transfer him to Denver, then France, while his worried Chicago family tries to locate him. Levy's riveting, poignantly humorous tale is well written, and her first-person narrative has the voice of a sweet Holden Caulfield (Billy's hero). Yet it's mystifying that Billy's intelligent father would permit this visit; equally bewildering is the youth's forgoing several possible opportunities to solicit help. Readers will see him through his predicament, however; this novel is hard to put down. Ages 10-up."
"Grade 5-8-- The dated theme--a child is kidnapped by a fanatic Hare Krishna-type cult of which his mother is a member--severely reduces this novel's appeal to today's readers. Levy does write a good novel, and the brainwashing of the teenage protagonist, Billy, by cult life is scary, and will draw readers in. Billy's mother is portrayed as a zombie, and his father and grandparents are fascinating, long-suffering people who care about their grandson and who go to great lengths to get him away from off-balanced people..."

A Good Courage
The rabbit that the boy was attached to was named Ophelia and she was killed by one of the elders.
Books mentioned in this topic
A Good Courage (other topics)No Way Home (other topics)
No Way Home (other topics)
No Way Home (other topics)