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The Chocolate War

Robert Cormier Matt Jones Matt Jones

$19.99

Paperback

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English
Puffin Books
24 October 2001
A tense thriller that

has become a cult classic, THE CHOCOLATE WAR is now part of the Originals, showcasing Penguin's very best modern classics for young adults.

The headmaster of Trinity College asks Archie Costello, the leader of the Vigils, a secret society that rules the school, to help with the selling of 20,000 boxes of chocolates in the annual fund-raising effort. Archie sees the chance of adding to his power - he is the Assigner, handing out to the boys tasks to be performed if they are to survive in the school. Freshman, Jerry Renault, a newcomer to the corrupt regime, refuses to sell chocolates. Enormous mental and physical pressure is put on him but he will not give in - the result is an inevitable, explosive tragedy.
By:  
Designed by:   ,
Imprint:   Puffin Books
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 198mm,  Width: 129mm,  Spine: 17mm
Weight:   202g
ISBN:   9780141312514
ISBN 10:   0141312513
Pages:   224
Publication Date:  
Recommended Age:   From 12 to 16 years
Audience:   Children/juvenile ,  12+ years ,  English as a second language
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Robert Cormier, formerly a journalist, now concentrates on writing fiction. He has published many fine novels for young adults and is known for his devastatingly truthful writing. He is enormously popular on both sides of the Atlantic. Robert lives in Massachussetts.

Reviews for The Chocolate War

Vicious and violent mob cruelty in a boy's prep school is not a new theme but Cormier makes it compellingly immediate in this novel of Trinity High - a boys' day school with the close, concentrated, self-contained atmosphere of a boarding school - temporarily headed by the venomous, manipulating Brother Leon and unofficially run by power-obsessed senior Archie Costello - the ingeniously audacious assigner for a secret organization called the Vigils. A typical Vigils assignment - which no student would consider refusing - is to spend the night undoing the screws of all the desks and chairs in one classroom, so that they collapse on touch next morning. More serious though is the assignment given freshman Jerry Renault, who must refuse for ten days to participate in the chocolate sale on which Brother Leon has staked his position. In strong, staccato scenes that shift from one boy to another Cormier tells about Jerry's persecution when he decides spontaneously to go on saying no after his ten days are up and Brother Leon induces Archie to see this as defiance of the Vigils. No underworld gang closing in on a victim is more menacing than this teenage army led by a Leon-Archie alliance against one boy whose locker poster reads Do I Dare Disturb the Universe. Mature young readers will respect the uncompromising ending that dares disturb the upbeat universe of juvenile books. (Kirkus Reviews)


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