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That's Not What Happened, by Kody Keplinger
Ebook Download That's Not What Happened, by Kody Keplinger
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Review
Praise for New York Times bestselling author Kody KeplingerThat's Not What Happened"An original and engrossing narrative about scars, recovery, and how the stories we tell can both sustain and hobble us." --Publishers Weekly"Echoing highly publicized tragedies, this taut, emotional story goes behind the headlines to reveal lives impacted by school violence." --Kirkus Reviews"A timely, thought-provoking read...." --School Library JournalRun"Bo and Agnes' unlikely friendship rings true and strong." --Kirkus Reviews"A good unlikely friendship story with compelling characters and a nuanced portrait of disability and small-town life." --School Library Journal"There's plenty to recommend . . . though the most effective thing here remains Agnes' and Bo's voices and the strength of their realistically tumultuous relationship." --BooklistThe DUFF"[A] well-written, irreverent, and heartfelt debut." --Publishers Weekly"A complex, enemies-with-benefits relationship that the YA market has never seen before . . . Her snarky teen speak, true-to-life characterizations, and rollicking sense of humor never cease in her debut." --Kirkus Reviews"What's best here is Bianca's brazen voice. Even when confused, she is truer to herself than most." --BooklistLying Out Loud, a companion to The DUFF"Just like the recipients of Sonny's fibs, readers will find themselves duped by her creativity, unabashed courage, and hilarious snark. Until it all blows up. Fierce, fresh, total fun." --Kirkus Reviews"Readers will cringe as Sonny digs herself deeper and deeper into trouble, then applaud when she learns how to develop trust in her relationships with parents, friends, and of course, a hot romantic interest." --VOYA"Sonny is a realistic and very human character, and even though she is a liar, her motivations are all too believable." --School Library Journal
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About the Author
Kody Keplinger grew up in a small Kentucky town. During her senior year of high school she wrote her debut novel, The DUFF, which is a New York Times bestseller, a USA Today bestseller, a YALSA Top Ten Quick Pick for Reluctant Readers, and a Romantic Times Top Pick. It has since been adapted into a major motion picture. Kody is also the author of Lying Out Loud, a companion to The DUFF; Run; Shut Out; and A Midsummer's Nightmare, as well as the middle-grade novel The Swift Boys & Me. Kody currently lives in New York City and writes full-time. You can visit her online at www.kodykeplinger.com.
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Product details
Age Range: 12 and up
Grade Level: 7 - 9
Lexile Measure: HL720L (What's this?)
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Hardcover: 336 pages
Publisher: Scholastic Press (August 28, 2018)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1338186523
ISBN-13: 978-1338186529
Product Dimensions:
5.8 x 1 x 8.5 inches
Shipping Weight: 14.9 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
Average Customer Review:
4.0 out of 5 stars
46 customer reviews
Amazon Best Sellers Rank:
#27,261 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
4.5 STARSWho are we? To ourselves, to others. Are we whom we know ourselves to be, or are we the narratives people envision us to be?THAT’S NOT WHAT HAPPENED examines a school shooting three years afterward from the perspective of Leanne and five other survivors of that fateful Ides of March. Lee knows the story that her best friend Sarah died proclaiming her love for god is false, paralleling the false narrative of Columbine victim Cassie Bernall, who people also falsely believed she died because of her beliefs. The truth that Cassie was rendered speechless from the bullets doesn’t matter to her parents or church members who used her as a source of inspiration. Sarah, the Girl With the Cross, actually died instantly. And the cross wasn’t even hers. The necklace belonged to survivor goth girl Kellie, who told the truth and was run out of town by bullies from Sarah’s church.Lee, haunted by the truth, wants to tell the truth. She believes Sarah deserves to be remembered for whom she actually was, instead of a martyr, knowing Sarah would want the truth told. The other survivors have different reactions to telling their own truths about the shooting.Kody Keplinger created a diverse cast of survivors with LGBT, race, disability, blindness, PTSD, substance abuse and asexuality. She didn’t capture the asexuality component of Leanne as accurately as she should have, not taking into account that attraction doesn’t necessarily happen before puberty and that a trauma like a school shooting can arrest emotional development or that anti-anxiety/depression meds often have side effects of dulling sexual desire. Lee may have been asexual, but at age seventeen with her history and the meds, the label could be limiting. Also, sexual orientation isn’t just about the act of sex. Keplinger did handle Leanne’s willingness to consider possibilities well.The message of THAT’S NOT WHAT HAPPENED is as important as the story of the survivors. We ought to be in control of our own narratives, not how people want to tell our stories. Our lives are our own stories to write, not others’. We are all doing our best to survive and thrive in this thing called life. None of us are getting out of here alive.
I enjoyed this book. It leads you to examine your own feelings on friendship, religious expression, and when the truth is (or isn't necessary). Nicely written.
I lost interest about 4 chapters in... don't know why, really. Just... not anything new, really. Same old story retold in a familiar way. We've heard it before.
Well developed charaters telling a story that is all to real. Graphically describes the shock a community goes through when these moments of insanity happens.
Price way less expensive then walking into a book store. Great book
Great item
This is, hands down, one of the best books I've read in some time."It's a good story. And you know what people like way more than the truth? A good story."I don't usually quote books in my reviews, but when I reached that one, it was such a perfect summation of the book that I knew I would have to use it. It encapsulates everything Keplinger is trying to get across with this novel. Yes, this is about the aftermath of a school shooting, but in many ways this book isn't even about school shootings.In this review, I will not reveal what Lee is trying to figure out: what actually happened the day of the shooting. However, I will be discussing some of the major plot points in detail, so if you haven't read the book, you may consider that spoiler-y. I advise continuing with this review at your own risk.I want to get back to the concept of stories. We humans like to talk about how important the truth is, but I don't think we're being honest, which is one of the biggest reasons this book resonated with me. What we humans like most are good stories, stories that jibe with what we think and believe, stories that help us make sense of the randomness and chaos of the world. Regardless of whether the characters in this book were touched directly by the tragedy or hearing about it from afar, everyone concerned wants a good story. Lee wants a story that will help her assuage her guilt, that will make her feel as if she's set the record straight at last. Sarah's parents want a story that helps them come to terms with losing their daughter. Ashley wants a story that helps her find meaning in what happened to her. Eden wants a story that helps her find a way to keep forging ahead, even though she feels like she's drowning. Even Denny wants a story, though it's not the story that's often told about him. He wants a story that he himself has determined, one where he gets to control his own narrative. As for Kellie and Miles, I can't say much about what they want without giving some major plot points away, so I won't.What Keplinger captures so masterfully in this book is the deep-seated human need we all feel to lay things out in a nice, sequential line that tricks us into thinking things make sense. Sometimes this need is so great that it causes us to ignore the parts of the story that don't add up, the details that don't make sense, because then we'd have to face the fact that the story we've been telling is more fiction than fact. This is definitely the case with Sarah's parents, and it's the case with many members of Sarah's church as well. Grappling with how the God they believe in could let something like the shooting happen is difficult and possibly faith-shaking, so they take comfort in the idea that Sarah died a martyr for her faith.Some readers may feel like this book is an assault on religion, and I can see what would make them feel that way. I don't think it is, though. The McHales and their church are, of course, religious, but they're not the only ones telling themselves tales that comfort them, adjusting the details to meet their own needs. Lee is doing it as well. In fact, we all do this, every day of our lives. Who hasn't taken a narrative, tweaked it a bit, adjusted or embellished a detail here and there, to make it come out the way we want? Maybe we do it because we don't want our parents to find out we were sneaking out, or we don't want our boss to know we skipped work to go to a baseball game, or we don't want our significant other to know we're seeing someone else on the side. Maybe we do it because if we don't we'll have to face our own flaws and inadequacies. Sometimes we aren't even fully aware that we are changing the narrative to suit our needs, and if we run up against something that causes us to see that we are spinning a fiction, it causes us a lot of pain.Another thing I think this book does so well is how it addresses trauma and how different people deal with their trauma differently. Some people try to derive meaning from it, like Ashley does. Some people get stuck, ending up in the same spirals, like Lee does. Some do their best to stay afloat while the water closes in over their heads, as it's doing with Eden. Some want to leave it in their past, don't want to be defined by it, want to start a new, different story of their life, as Denny does. And as tempting as it is for me to get into how some of the other characters are dealing with their trauma, I won't. Sometimes I don't mind spoiling stories, but in this case I do, because I really want people to read this book and discover those spoilers on their own.This book is important, but maybe not in the way some people will think. It has obvious resonance in the current United States, where mass shootings have become tragically common precisely because Americans can't agree on one story and are therefore doomed to be stuck in the same endless loop while these tragedies continue to play out. But this novel is also timely because it is such a deep, intimate look at cognitive dissonance, about the tricks our minds play on us in order to protect us from the pain of facing things we don't want to face, or don't feel equipped to face. Leaning to pick apart a story isn't an easy experience for anyone, and it's one that can be extraordinarily painful, but it's a skill that benefits people to develop. Without understanding how to recognize the stories we're being told--and are telling ourselves--how can we ever learn not to be taken in? How can we develop the critical thinking skills required to enable us to pick through the threads in order to find where they mesh and where they don't? This is an enormously compassionate novel, one I think is well worth reading precisely because it will make you think.
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