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Breaktime (A Book for new adults) [Hardcover]

Aidan Chambers (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Hardcover, 1978 --  
Paperback $8.96  

Book Description

1978 A Book for new adults

The first two novels in Printz-winner Aidan Chambers’s Dance Sequence are at last available in a fresh format that will draw teens to these classics of YA literature.

Literature is crap. Fiction is, anyway. A pretense. Ersatz. . . . When you read a story you are pretending a lie. —Morgan

 

What begins as a game for Ditto—the refutation of his friend Morgan’s Charges Against Literature—quickly escalates into a multilevel challenge. After Ditto’s father suffers a heart attack in the middle of one of their fights, Ditto decides he has to get away for a few days to sort out his life. His chronicle of his experiences becomes his rebuttal to Morgan’s Charges. But is this thought-provoking examination of people and ideas all fact . . . or fiction? Aidan Chambers leaves it up to the reader to decide in this novel that Publishers Weekly calls “excruciatingly funny as well as touching.”

 

Includes a new afterword from the author!

 

Praise for Aidan Chambers

Michael L. Printz Award winner

Carnegie Medal winner

Hans Christian Andersen Award winner
--This text refers to the Paperback edition.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

"Excruciatingly funny as well as touching." --Publishers Weekly --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

From the Inside Flap

Refreshingly unconventional, an exciting story and a witty game played between author and reader.

It all begins with a challenge. Morgan sneers at Ditto for relying on books as his sole source of information, and defies Ditto to prove that literature is ever related to life. Ditto takes up the challenge, writing an account of what is happening to him. His father has a heart attack, he makes friends with a couple of burglars, gets involved in a drunken brawl and has a life-changing encounter with the girl of his dreams--. True? Or just a story? It's not for Morgan alone to decide-- --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 138 pages
  • Publisher: Bodley Head; 1st Us Edition edition (1978)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0370301226
  • ISBN-13: 978-0370301228
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #10,545,461 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

Customer Reviews

2 Reviews
5 star:
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3 star:
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Average Customer Review
4.0 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Is fiction useless?, September 28, 2008
By 
Raymond Mathiesen (Armidale, N.S.W., Australia) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Breaktime (Paperback)
Ditto and Morgan are two English seventeen-year-old high school students doing their A levels. According to Morgan literature is a load of garbage, useless, a lie, having nothing to do with life. It obeys rules and is ordered in a way that life never does. Ditto sees things very differently. He likes studying English Literature and is inspired by his teacher Midge. But how can he get across to Morgan the enthusiasm he feels for fiction? In an inspired moment Ditto sets out to write his own piece of literature that will answer Morgan's criticisms. So Ditto begins to write an account of the events that happen to him during the half-term holiday break, and this book is the end result of his efforts.

On one level this book is simply a record of an unusually turbulent week in the life of an ordinary person. On another level it is a coming of age story about a young man who leaves his childhood behind and experiences the first expressions of adult sexuality. Psychologically this is the story of a youth's growing separation from his father. Then again this is the story of someone trapped in thoughts and words, the endless commentary of the mind. There is a lot in this book to think about and it strikes me that this is just what life is like: complex, with no easy answers or pat resolutions.

This book is also complex stylistically. Following the example of modernists like James Joyce and T.S. Elliott Ditto sets out to stretch and break the 'rules' of literature. Sometimes the text is written in the third-person; sometimes it is in first-person. Sometimes the narrative contains considerable description and comment, and sometimes there is no narration at all, but just named report of dialogue as in the text of a play. Sometimes the commentary comes almost as scientific observation listed under italicized headings. Ditto writes:

"Nature of bus experience: consoling, comforting, contenting. Vehicle warm. Motion tranquillizing. ...[etc.]"

Sometimes quotes from other texts are given, such as from travel guides, relevant pieces of fiction and poetry. Sometimes illustrations are used rather than just words. Sometimes parallel thoughts and commentary is given in alternate lines down the page. This is a very adventurously written 'novel' and always we are faced with the question: "Where is the truth in all of this?" This modernist writing style is a little hard to get used to and understand at first, especially the very long sentences representing the 'stream of consciousness', the gabble of Ditto's mind. But with a little perseverance this is a very enjoyable book.

This is a quit short novel and when I came to the end I wished there was more of it. Chambers manages to make us like and care about Ditto, and want to know more about him. He has created a well-humored book that surprises us and entertains us, but which also makes us think. This book would do excellently for a high school paper: it contains so much in so few pages.

This is the first in the "Dance Sequence", a set of stand-alone novels, which inter-relate thematically, but which are unconnected in story line and characters.
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3.0 out of 5 stars Breaktime, April 26, 2002
By A Customer
This review is from: Breaktime (Hardcover)
Breaktime is a book centred around Ditto and his experiences trying to prove to his friend Morgan why literature is valuable.
It took me a while to become interested in this book, mainly because the themes seemed boring and uninteresting, but the story actually turns out to be quite a good read, and it mainly concerns Ditto's discoveries about himself, life, other people and sex. Its a story about growing up, experiencing new things and changing.
Or at least thats what it seems like, until you get to the last page, which will make you smile - and re-think the whole thing.
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