Saturday, May 28, 2011

Hero Type by Barry Lyga




Name: Caitlin

Grade: 12+

Book: Hero Type

Author: Barry Lyga

What does it mean to be a hero? I consider myself and my peers to be part of a superhero generation, but even that doesn't make the question any simpler. For Kevin Ross (Kross to his friends) the question is even more complicated. Kross is a hero; he saved a girl, Leah, from being raped by a notorious criminal. That makes him a hero, right? Unfortunately for Kross, it's definitely not that simple. Admired by everyone in his small town, Kross finds himself in a tricky situation; his father never speaks because of a mysterious war accident, his friends are the biggest pranksters in town and to top it all off, the entire town is turning on him because his father took the "support our troops" stickers off of the car awarded to him for saving Leah. As the dark secrets of his father's past, as well as his own, emerge, Kross starts to question if he ever really was a hero. Kross has to learn to accept his life for what it is and learn to stand up and do the right thing in the face of complete opposition before he can ever ask himself what it means to be a hero.

Barry Lyga is one of my favorite authors. I've read all of his books except one, but out of all of them Hero Type is definitely my favorite. Lyga has a way of binding the weirder, darker side of real life with the things that people actually feel when they're experiencing. Kross is put into a very, very difficult position when his father takes the "support our troops," stickers off his car, made even more difficult when he has to face the most popular kid in school to stand up for why his father did it. This book has so many controversial issues in it, which makes it difficult to write a review; there's too much to talk about. The complexity of the story and characters, however, make this book more than amazing.
By the end of the book, I was totally rooting for Kross to win and for everyone to love him again, but Lyga also has a way with focusing on the reality of the story. Nothing about this book is sugar coated; Kross is extremely unlikeable and creepy in many parts of the book, but for all of these major flaws, Kross is extremely human. All of the characters are flawed and confused enough for me to actually believe them and all of this makes the book totally convincing. The lives that Lyga built for the people in this small town are remarkable and fantastic. Not everything is resolved by the end of the book, but it's obvious that Lyga planned for it to be that way and it only adds to the reality of the entire story. The reality and humanity Lyga wrote into this book are definitely what made it so utterly great.

Why I picked up this book:
It sounded interesting and I love Barry Lyga.

Why I finished it: I totally couldn't put it down.

I'd give this books to: Speech kids. Definitely speech kids. But, honestly, I think everyone should read this book.

My rating for this book: *****

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