PPF6 Book - samenvatting engels PDF

Title PPF6 Book - samenvatting engels
Course Engels
Institution ASO
Pages 2
File Size 142.4 KB
File Type PDF
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Summary

samenvatting engels...


Description

PPF6 Book “Stone Cold” R. Swindells Discuss the main characters in a text of minimum 250 Use the vocabulary of Unit 5 (green pages) to decribe their personalities. The main character in the novel is Link. Until his father left home for a receptionist, Link was a lucky boy. His unhappy life started afterwards. Link’s mother meets Vince who was an old-fashioned and disturbed man. He goes to London through him. Sister Carole is 4 years older than Link but she always spoils him. Link never thought that the life on the street would be so hard. He feels really lost in the beginning and is not at all used to be begging money from others. Link is so naïve that he believes in everything that is said. He doesn’t tell everything, I think he is a introverted person, so he is also insecure of everything. He has a depressed character. He suddenly has to start a life alone, he had to think mature. Until now he was dependent on his parents. On the other hand, I find him fearless because he immediately searches for work to earn money and finds a house to live in. He quickly becomes friends with Ginger and later with GailI. I think he is easy going. He is so naive that he doesn't see that Gail is manipulative and trustworthy. The bad person in the novel is Shelter who is a serial killer. Shelter is a determined, nasty and gifted person. He describes his own as a “handsome devil but idle, lad” and he doesn’t find himself stupid. I don't think he's stupid but he's certainly a devil. Link is so gullible that he trusts him too. Look for an English review on the internet (source!!)Do you agree with this? Explain with decent arguments in minimum 7 lines. http://vuxkna.blogspot.com/2011/04/book-review-stone-cold.html

Stone Cold by Robert Swindells

Stone Cold by Robert Swindells – review Kids are disappearing, but no one cares… Linda Kornberg Krogh Saturday 26 March, 2011 Robert Swindells is known for writing thought-provoking novels about contemporary society and Stone Cold, published in 1993, is certainly one of them. It was awarded the Carnegie Medal and Sheffield Children’s Book Award in 1994 and it was adapted for the screen by the BBC in 1997. One of the main characters in the novel is Link. When he was fourteen years old his father ran off with a receptionist. Link’s life became a mess but he stuck it out in school and managed to finish with five GCSEs. His mother has by then met Vince whom accuses Link of living on his money since Link is unable to find work. Finally, Link cannot stand anymore of Vince’s verbal abuse and therefore decides to try his luck in London instead. However, he runs out of money and ends up on the streets where he befriends Ginger, who teaches him about the life of a homeless person. What the two of them are not aware of though, is that there is serial

killer on the loose in London and his target is homeless people, Link and Ginger included. Unfortunately, no one seems to care when homeless teenagers start disappearing and one day Ginger does not turn up at their agreed meeting point. The story of this novel is also written from the viewpoint of another character who calls himself Shelter. He has been discharged from the army where he used to turn young men into proper soldiers and his belief is that there is a plot of undermining the country by filling it with homeless people, alcoholics and drug addicts and that it is his duty to clean up the streets. Throughout the novel we follow Link and Shelter in alternating chapters and both stories are told in first person. In the chapters about Link we follow his struggle to survive and he is made likeable by being a victim and by the way his story is told with a colloquial language and he often turns to the reader, for example when describing in detail how it feels trying to go to sleep on a hard concrete floor when your feet are as cold as ice. The language in the chapters where we follow Shelter is different and you get a military feeling with short sentences and harsh words and these chapters are also a lot shorter. We follow Shelter from where he meticulously plans how to lure the homeless youngsters to his home until he is a full-fledged serial killer. Shelter also turns to the reader, but this does not have the same effect as with Link’s story since the reader quite early understands that his plans are to murder young people. Shelter himself does not quite seem to understand why he was discharged from the army but to the reader this soon becomes quite clear. This novel is a very realistic novel about teenage problems, but as many other novels it has a touch of adventure in that Link tries to find out what has happened to Ginger and for a moment he goes from being a nobody to being a hero even though it is just for a short while. There is also a touch of family story in the beginning when the reader is told about the abusive situation in Link’s family and the fact that his own mother does not stand up for him. But most of all it is a teenage problem novel with a tale of what could happen to you if leave your home without having anywhere to live and no money and that running away does not solve the problem. But it is also a story of what can happen if parents choose to ignore the way their children are treated. Furthermore, my opinion is that Swindells’ main reason for writing this novel is to give a very realistic picture of the lives of the homeless people. The people that most of us tend to choose not to see when we pass them in the streets, believing that it is probably their own fault that they are living like that. The topic of teenagers living in an abusive home is not a new one. Neither is teenagers on the run and living on the streets. Teenage problem novels have been written in thousands and it is a sub-genre of young adult literature. They can also be said to belong to the genre of moral and instructive tales. The early novels in this genre were written mostly to teach children how to behave in a mature way, whereas during the late twentieth century they came to have a much more social and political point of view and Stone Cold is certainly a part of this tradition. Examples of earlier texts in this sub-genre are The Catcher in the Rye (1951), The Outsiders (1967), Go Ask Alice (1971), Forever(1975) and Dear Nobody (1991) who all deal with problems faced by teenagers such as drugs, confusion, rebellion, sex, pregnancy and friendships. Swindells’ describes very well how easily a young person can end up being an outcast in society without actually having done anything wrong, which I also think is the message of this book. It gives you another view of homeless people and you understand that there might be other reasons than alcoholism and drug addiction that causes young people to end up in the streets, that there are children who would rather live like that than go back to the abusive homes they came from and this causes me as a reader to view upon homelessness with different eyes. The ending of this novel is very open and free to interpret the way the reader wishes and this is perhaps a negative point since I would have wished for a happier ending. Furthermore, it does not quite match the excitement that has been built up in the rest of novel, but feels rather flat in comparison, almost like Swindells got bored with the story. Nonetheless, I think this is a thoughtprovoking novel with an enthralling plot which is well worth reading.

The novel is written from two persons' points of view; Link and Shelter. This way you can get a good picture of the difficult life on the street. Everything is described in detail. Sometimes I do not know exactly who described it. With this novel, teens can see how important it is to be at home in your own environment with your parents and family. Sometimes young people think life outside is much better or they underestimate the dangers that are on the streets. On the other hand, parents should pay more attention to their children. Stand behind their child in such a way that they do not get stuck. Parents should not offend their children. I also think that the end of the book was not funny because there was an open end. After such an exciting story, I expected a nice ending. Write 3 questions you would like to ask the main character. Don't you regret leaving the house? Wasn't it better to live with your mother or your sister? Did you really not see how Gail was bad?...


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