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Small Town Sinners
Small Town Sinners
Author: Melissa Walker
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ISBN-13: 9781599905273
ISBN-10: 1599905272
Publication Date: 7/19/2011
Pages: 272
Rating:
  • Currently 3.5/5 Stars.
 2

3.5 stars, based on 2 ratings
Publisher: Bloomsbury USA Children's Books
Book Type: Hardcover
Other Versions: Paperback
Members Wishing: 0
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skywriter319 avatar reviewed Small Town Sinners on + 784 more book reviews
YA contemporary fiction just gets more and more stunning in their nuanced, relatable, and thought-provoking treatments of difficult subjects. Melissa Walkers latest novel, SMALL TOWN SINNERS, is arguably the best examination of religious evangelism that I have read in YA fiction. Its sympathetic cast of characters and the careful way it treads the middle ground between black and white make it a superb literary accomplishment.

Religion is, as ever, a sensitive topic, one that is often difficult to talk about due to its highly personal and subjective manner. Which is why what Melissa Walker does in SMALL TOWN SINNERS is so impressive. Virtually all of the characters in this novel support rather unpopular and subjectively archaic positions on todays controversial hot topics like abortion and gay marriage. However, rather than simply demonizing religious evangelists, Walker deftly makes all of her characters likeable, or at the very least sympathetic. Its easy to hate issues and take solid stances on them when they are distant. However, when the issues hit homewhen they become personalis what SMALL TOWN SINNERS does so well. Walker shows that things such as faith and beliefs are individual and personal. This is a lesson that everyone could care to learn and promote.

The theme of SMALL TOWN SINNERS is a wonderful one, which makes up for the fact that sometimes, I felt like the characters were a littlemild. Lacey is a great protagonist in that she really captures the ambiguity of questioning her church-based faith, but there are times when I wanted her to be more than simply a mind-churning, tears-swallowing, does-he-like-me-or-not girlie-girl. Laceys best friend Starla Joy is said to be this more gregarious and outspoken girl, but she doesnt very often display that. Ty, the supposed love interest, is, in my opinion, blown a bit out of proportion in the books synopsis. In SMALL TOWN SINNERS, romance definitely takes a backseat to the more compelling plotline of characters questioning their former beliefs. In fact, one may even think that the romance is a little lacking, a little too contrived.

But these minor qualms of mine regarding the characters dont really matter in light of the books larger message. I love that the characters of SMALL TOWN SINNERS change over the course of the storybut in a way that stays true to who they are, and the way they were brought up. Needless to say, this is probably one of the most skilled and nuanced portrayals of extreme religion Ive read in YA literature. All sorts of readers, I think, find this book compelling and eye-opening.


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