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Binding: Paperback
ISBN: 978-1-57131-691-2
Pages: 160
Publish Date: Dec, 2009
Genre: Fiction
Border Crossing
BY Jessica Lee Anderson
Manz is sure of one thing—he lives on the wrong side of the tracks in dusty Rockhill, Texas. Life is tough for everyone—his hard-drinking mother, her truck-driving boyfriend, even his privileged friend Jed—but especially for Manz, the mixed-race son of migrant apple pickers. If he could only get out of town, his life would be better.
A revealing look a one young mans struggle with identity and the effects of schizophrenia.
When the summer heat sets in, Manz and Jed take a job rebuilding fence for a cattle ranch outside town. There he meets Vanessa, who works in the ranchs kitchen. The two hit it off, but Manz isnt sure he can trust her. As the dog days drag on, Manz must negotiate an unwieldy terrain involving an unpredictable, alcoholic mother, a best friend whose father uses him as a punching bag, and a simmering, creeping delusion thatOperation Wetback"—which brutally relocated illegal aliens deep in Mexican territory following World War II—has been put back into effect. Manzs bright and questioning mind begins to give in to its own claustrophobic temptations as he finds guidance in the voices that have been growing louder and more insistent each day.
OTHER BOOKS BY THIS AUTHOR:
"The first-person narrative gives readers a poignant close-up of the teen's gradual loss of control to paranoid schizophrenia. Anderson's vivid portrayal of this frightening illness nevertheless offers hope for the valiant human spirit."
—School Library Journal"[Border Crossing] is a page-turner. Anderson manages to be both realistic and compassionate in her depiction of mental illness."
—New Pages"The descriptions of Manz’s escalating symptoms are compelling. There are few books for teens on the subject of schizophrenia . . . a fast read, this book will provoke discussion and, perhaps, further research."
—Booklist"Poignant. Through the teenager's first-person narration, Anderson traces the isolated landscape of Rockhill, a very small town in Texas, and reveals the distressing stories behind the apparent simplicity of its inhabitants' lives. [A] thought-provoking exploration of mental illness."
—Kirkus"This taut coming of age novel explores mental illness and border issues in an honest and clear voice."
—Boys Read











