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The Island

The Island

Released: 2018-08-09
© Bonnier Publishing Fiction
The Island - QR Code
2.4 MB
Get it on Apple Books
2.4 MB
Get it on Apple Books
Released: 2018-08-09
© Bonnier Publishing Fiction

Description

Seven students. One plane crash. No rules.
Link is a fish out of water. Newly arrived from America, he is finding it hard to settle into the venerable and prestigious Osney School. Who knew there could be so many strange traditions to understand? And what kind of school ranks its students by how fast they can run round the school quad - however ancient that quad may be?
When Link runs the slowest time in years, he immediately becomes the butt of every school joke. And some students are determined to make his life more miserable than others . . .
When a school summer trip is offered, Link can think of nothing worse than spending voluntary time with his worst tormentors. But when his parents say he can only leave Osney School - forever - if he goes on the trip, Link decides to endure it for the ultimate prize. But this particular trip will require a very special sort of endurance.
The saying goes 'No man is an island' - but what if on that island is a group of teenagers, none of whom particularly like each other?
When oppressive heat, hunger and thirst start to bite, everyone's true colours will be revealed. Let the battle commence . . .

Apple Books: Customer Ratings

Ratings & Reviews

0.0 of 5 (No rating)

Apple Books: Customer Reviews

2018-08-23

Enjoyable read

I enjoyed 'The island' it was a good book that gained momentum as it went along, before the secret of the island is revealed and it all comes crashing down as reality sets in. The beginning was quite long but it was essential to the plot, the characters were believable, with they own talents and flaws. 'The island' was full of pop culture references, and I think this book will be popular with many people of different ages. This was a good book that I enjoyed reading, the writer managed to keep me interested in what direction the plot would take and how 'link'the main character will handle it. 'The island' will inevitably be compared with and considered to be a present day version of 'The lord of the flies'.
Readerready2018
2018-08-08

Disappointing

actual rating: 1.5/5
the island: a story of a geek stranded on an island with his persecutors, how he reverses their social statuses and it’s effect.
how do i describe this? i originally chose this book because i wanted something to read on holiday and i’d heard that the author’s other book STAGS was well written. because of that i naturally had pretty decent standards set for this book, and i was unfortunately quite disappointed.
the story was very slow for such a small book. we don’t even reach the island until around the 100 page mark. up until that point, all we find out is how bad our main character Link feels his life is because he’s a geek and a slow runner. we don’t see him do anything other than accept it.
the narrative was purposely geeky and from an outsider’s point of view, and the narrator purposely dislikeable, but i thought it was too overdone. instead of merely disliking link, i just felt very, very uncomfortable. there were passages i couldn’t help but squirm through: some were COMPLETELY wrong and others were just plain embarrassing.
on the island, Link becomes rapidly more and more dislikable whilst his bitter and reprehensible actions start to come through. he makes girls dress up in a skirt and do things for him, punishing them with starvation if they didn’t do what he wanted and that made me sick. he thinks that he’s entitled to do all of this because of how he was bullied in school.
whilst the characters were the most built up out of everything in the whole book, they were very cliched and were your typical high school stereotypes. i feel like the author tried to be quirky with an overused trope but it really didn’t work. as this was a very character-based story, nothing else was as well-developed or explored as i’d hoped. there were so many opportunities that they author could have taken about more aspects of the actual island.
every ‘twist’ in the story could have been seen a mile off so i wasn’t surprised when any of them occurred, which was a shame because i’d heard that there were many twists in STAGS. if they were anything like the twists in the island i doubt i’m going to enjoy the novel.
the epilogue of this book made me lose all hope of this book having any redeeming qualities. it was just so far-fetched and seemingly unlikely that it was very unbelievable.
AIaina.