Hostage Three
Material type:
- 9781408828229
- YA/F/LAK
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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Colombo Children's Area | YA/F/LAK | Checked out | 02/08/2025 | CA00023388 | ||
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Matara Apex Fiction | YA/F/LAK | Available | CA00023389 |
Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
It's a once-in-a-lifetime thing: a girl on a yacht with her super-rich banker father; a chance for the family to heal after a turbulent time; the peaceful sea, the warm sun . . . But a nightmare is about to explode as a group of Somali pirates seizes the boat and its human cargo - and the family becomes a commodity in a highly sophisticated transaction. Hostage One is Dad - the most valuable. Amy is Hostage Three. As she builds a strange bond with one of her captors, it becomes brutally clear that the price of a life and its value are very different things . . .
£6.99
Reviews provided by Syndetics
Publishers Weekly Review
The Somali pirates who seize a British yacht dehumanize their victims by giving them numbers. Thus, millionaire banker James Fields and his new wife become Hostages One and Two. Hostage Three is his 17-year-old daughter, Amy, who narrates this perceptive and harrowing novel from Printz-winner Lake (In Darkness). Despite virtuosic talent with the violin and a posh upbringing, Amy is sullen and adrift when the story opens, having sabotaged her final A-level exam and had her face pierced with multiple bolts-all to get back at her father for remarrying too soon after her mother's death. Amy initially greets his plan to sail around the world with apathy, but having a gun put to her head awakens her will to live, especially when the gunman is Farouz, the pirates' interpreter, with whom Amy has secretly developed a romance. Through Farouz, Amy learns about the Somalis' daily struggle to survive the desert and decades of war ("All our stories are about hunger," Farouz tells her). An inventive narrative construction (Lake offers alternate endings) plays on the highly unstable situation of this utterly compelling read. Ages 12-up. (Nov.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.School Library Journal Review
Gr 8 Up-Amy Fields walks out of her A Level exams required for entrance into the Royal Academy; she is still grieving over her mother's death and cares little about the future. Her rich father and new stepmother hope that sailing around the world will allow much-needed family bonding, but the idyllic trip ends when Somalian pirates seize their yacht and hold them for ransom. Tension is palpable as the frightened family and crew become pawns in the businesslike negotiations. Although carefully guarded with machine guns, the British teen observes a pecking order among her captors and befriends Farouz, the pirates' handsome translator. They share memories of personal pain that include Amy's mother's suicide, the execution of Farouz's parents, and the political imprisonment of his brother. Their stories are vivid and poignant, adding layers to a rich characterization, especially details of Somalian culture and mythology. Amy falls in love, understanding Farouz's vow to use ransom money to free his brother, but is startled back to reality when he agrees to follow orders to shoot her on command. Circumstances become dire when she learns secrets about her father's business that jeopardize their release, and rival pirates and the navy get involved. The author playfully tells Amy's account of the rescue the way she hoped it would play out, and then again, as it actually happened. The narrative twist is brilliant, taking readers on an emotional ride to the very last page.-Vicki Reutter, Cazenovia High School, NY (c) Copyright 2013. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.Booklist Review
*Starred Review* Lake's follow-up to In Darkness (2012) shares two distinct traits with that Printz Award-winning novel: a Cormac McCarthy style of nonattributed dialogue and a canny ability to generate sympathy for those who are ostensibly villains. Still smarting from the suicide of her mother, Amy, 17, is unenthused to be spending months aboard her wealthy father's yacht, along with the stepmother and a small crew. Their edgy boredom is torn apart when the ship is overwhelmed by Somali pirates or coast guard as they prefer to be known who have nothing personal against Amy's family and wish them no harm. What they want is simple: a few million dollars in ransom. But until they get it, there are rules, guns, secrets, and nerve-shredding negotiations with the navy. Right away, Amy feels a connection with 25-year-old Somali translator Farouz, who soon returns her attentions. Lake doesn't play this as Stockholm syndrome, so readers' mileage will vary on their ability to believe in such a sudden and intense emotional affair: It was like our skins spoke to each other, moons Amy after an accidental touch. With a verisimilitude that recalls Mal Peet, Lake illustrates how pirating is the best hope Farouz has to get his brother out of prison and forge a real life for himself. Like Amy, readers will be torn. Intelligent, empathetic, and eye-opening. HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: The Printz Award brought overdue attention to Lake, and the result should be significant curiosity in what he's cooked up this time.--Kraus, Daniel Copyright 2010 BooklistHorn Book Review
The last way seventeen-year-old Amy wants to spend the summer after high school is sailing around the world with her father and new stepmother. When Somali pirates hijack the family's yacht, the sullen, entitled teen forms a surprising bond with one of their captors. Lake's sensitive character development and sophisticated storytelling (including alternate endings) helps elicit readers' sympathies for his complex characters. (c) Copyright 2014. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.Kirkus Book Review
A diamond in the rough that, pared down, could be a glittering gem. Amy Fields is a privileged 17-year-old who has had a dose of tragedy--her mother's suicide--to which she reacts with blame and shame. The blame is for her remaining parent, her father; the shame is for her inability to see her mother's suicide coming. Forced by her father and stepmother to accompany them on a round-the-world cruise in her father's posh yacht, she is at first withdrawn and surly. Then, in the Gulf of Aden, Somali pirates capture the yacht, and Amy begins to experience a bit of life outside the bubble as she and her family are held hostage. As the tale unfolds, assumptions about right and wrong, First World and Third World crumble under Amy's (and readers') growing awareness. Things are complicated further when Amy falls in love with one of the pirates and he with her. Printz winner (In Darkness, 2012) Lake's writing is often breathtakingly illuminating, but there is too much of it. Three metaphors are used when one will do, as the rambling first-person narration seemingly disgorges Amy's every thought and forces readers to do their own filtering. Readers will most likely forgive the lack of narrative control, however, as they become caught up in the layered nuances of this original story. (Fiction. 14 up)]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.There are no comments on this title.