Saturday, April 21, 2007

The Time It Takes To Fall by Margaret Lazarus Dean

This is a book about Dolores Gray and the changes that take place in her life. The story starts out with her and her family happy and together, but then her father is fired from his job as a technician at NASA. The story than introduces Eric Biersdorfer, son of the Director of Launch Saftey, and when he becomes friends with Dolores a chance for her father to get his job at NASA opens up, and Dolores' mom seems willing to do anything to get that job back for her husband, maybe even have an affair with the Director of Launch Safety. When Dolores' dad finally gets his job back, Dolores is happy but can't help wondering if it was because of her mother and an affair she may or not be having. Things fall apart once again for Dolores, though, and her mom leaves her dad and her's father's job may be in jeopardy when a launch goes terribly wrong. But there are upsides for Dolores, she has been advanced to high school where she makes two good friends and starts dating a senior, but everything still seems bad for Dolores when her relationship with her father starts to fall apart, she develops interest in another boy, she starts skipping classes, and she is still plagued with the question of is her mom having an affair.

I liked this book overall, it telled a very interesting story of a girl and her life seemingly to fall apart. But overall I disliked the fact that things seemed to keep on going wrong; the story starts out with her father getting fire which seemed to have supposed to been the low of the story, but suprisingly it is not. The climax really seems to take place when Dolores' fathers job seems to be in jeopardy. I liked that Dolores Gray is portrayed as a teenager not quite sure of anything really (such as how to deal with making a friend), but I hate that she does stuff like abandon Eric and ditch classes which may just be the goody-two-shoes in me. The one thing I really liked about the book was Dolores' younger sister who even with all her stupid questions (in Dolores' opinion) seemed like the innocent person of the book, and I really liked that in her character. The book was overall enjoyable, and depicted an interesting family with problems.

Reviewer Age:15
Reviewer City, State and Country: Tucson, Arizona U.S.A.