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The First Part Last (2005)

The First Part Last (2005)

Book Info

Genre
Series
Rating
3.94 of 5 Votes: 2
Your rating
ISBN
0689849230 (ISBN13: 9780689849237)
Language
English
Publisher
simon pulse

About book The First Part Last (2005)

The book I’m reviewing is The First Part Last by Angela Johnson. This book is fiction. The main idea of The First Part Last is a young couple having a child but not knowing if they want to keep it.The First Part Last is based on a teenage couple that doesn’t know if they want to keep their baby or put it up for adoption. When Nia goes into coma during labor Bobby one of the main characters decides to stay with his daughter Feather he wanted to be part of her life. This was a hard dissection for him. Bobby’s wasn’t able to go to parties go out with his friends like he used to. It was all about his daughter.The First Part Last is a very interesting book. This book is was interesting because of all the drama. Also because it has to do with love. This book is also a memorable book because you don’t hear about a lot of boys or men doing this. This book is entertaining because they explain there actions that makes you feel like your there. My favorite part of the First Part Last was when Bobby’s friend asked him if he was really going to keep Feather and “‘he said’ know doubt in mind I’m keeping her” (pg11). The reason this was my favorite part is because not a lot of boys or men would say that to there friends. The First Part Last was very descriptive in ways that it explained what they did before she got pregnant. When I read this book I was able to visualize some of the scenes because they were so interesting. It depended what the characters were doing for me to visualize them. Some characters weren’t that interesting so I really wouldn’t be able to visualize them. Well this was a big issue because they are teenagers and just one of the parents had stayed with the child. Well do you know what it is to be fifth teen years old and have twins and have to live in a shelter with your two children? That’s hard to see someone you love in that situation. But that’s why I think that teenagers should read this book. Just by reading this book would make you think before you do.I recommend this book to teenager’s boys and girls because it makes you think a lot. I think boys will also like this book because the main character is a boy and he is the one who stays with the baby. This book is also good for teenager because it shows you how it messes there life’s up. So it would make you think before you do. That why I recommend this book to teens.

The First Part Last follows the story of Bobby, your typical teenaged boy in an urban city, and doesn't seem to have a care in the world. At least, until he learns on his sixteenth birthday that his girlfriend, Nia, is pregnant. This completely changes his world. Told in "then" and "now" sections, The First Part Last tells Bobby's story from learning that Nia is pregnant to what his life is like with a baby at 16. Suddenly, his life revolves around his daughter, and he finds that he no longer has time for the fun things that he used to do, like hanging out with friends and going to parties. The only way for Bobby and Nia to have a normal life is for them to put their baby up for adoption, but once the baby is born, Bobby is no longer sure that this is what he wants to do.Overall, I think this book is generally a good look at teenage pregnancy, especially from the male perspective. Not many young adult books that are published about this topic take it on from the male point of view, the majority of them deal with what the girl is going through and how it will drastically change her life. I think a lot of people forget that having a baby also changes the life of the guy involved as well, especially if he wants to be involved in his baby's life. Overall, I thought the tone of the novel seemed very mellow, and didn't really seem to be building up to anything. However, I think this worked for the length of the novel, if it was any longer, it might have lost my attention. All in all, I definitely think this is a fairly truthful novel, and a good look into a life that many teenagers hear about, but they don't really know much about.As for a classroom setting, I think this book would be good to keep n the shelf, but again, I don't really see how it would be taught in a classroom, though it could fit into a health class, when talking about the consequences of sex and the like. But it's also a good novel for teachers to keep on the shelf, for students that may be in the same situation that Bobby finds himself in.

Do You like book The First Part Last (2005)?

I think this book was not terrible but it was not good. I had a mutual feeling toward this book. I think this book had a lot of flaws and it was confusing at times. A few weaknesses about this book was that, every other chapter talked about the past and the other chapters talked about the present, which made it difficult to follow what was really happening throughout this book. Also another weakness was that one of the main parts, which I think should've been released in the middle, wasn't told until the ending. I also did not like the way the book ended. A few strengths was that it kept me on my toes the whole time by keeping me guessing about what was going to happen next. I do not recommend this book to be read for a summer reading project because its short and doesn't have enough details about the important parts, but if you are reading this book for fun I think you'll find it interesting and shocking.
—Brianna Soucy

tIt's an old story, really. Two crazy, blissed-out, in-love teenagers lose track of reality and responsibility....and find themselves suddenly deep in the reality of PREGNANCY. Somehow, the couple is ripped apart from the stress, and one lonely teen is left to raise the baby...and grow up a LOT...all on their own (and with a little help from their family). Think you know the story backwards and forwards? What if I told you the one left to care for the kid was the teenage BOY? Where's the mom? You'll have to read the story yourself to find out. Johnson uses time and text structure inventively throughout this very short novella, alternating chapters with the titles "then" and "now," so that you're constantly trying to pick up the pieces of what has happened so quickly and irrevocably, much like the main character as he scrambles through his mind, juxtaposing his life before, with his life after, the birth of the baby.My favorite thing about reading this novella was how Johnson expertly channeled her unique voice onto the page to develop the main character, as well as the setting and tone. You just HEAR these guys sitting around, talking, and it feels VERY honest and VERY comfortable. It's difficult to make ethnic dialect and teenage-talk not sound silly or patronizing, and I think Johnson pulls it off beautifully.It's not necessarily a preachy, cautionary tale. Not that it is AT ALL an encouragement for teens to go have lots of premarital sex and become mothers and fathers while they're still struggling through high school, either! It's almost as if Johnson understands that that particular message is so obvious, so apparent, the audience doesn't need it beat into them for the entirety of the story. Instead, she chooses to address the psychological development of a boy becoming a man, as well as give illumination to the special love that grows between a parent and child, regardless of age, situation, hardship, inconvenience, trauma, etc.Overall, a short, enjoyable read, totally worth the five or so dollars I paid for it at Borders. It obviously DOES have some sexually mature content (mostly in reference, almost nothing in graphic depiction), and a bit of mature language sprinkled here and there. Also, prepare for a tear-jerker of an ending.
—Katherine Lewis

Ten pages into the book and the poetry of this book is so good, in particular the line about the main character Bobby holding his eleven-day old baby daughter on his chest and how humans should be "knowing in the beginning and innocent in the end." He then says "Then everyone could end their life on their mama or daddy's stomach in a warm room, waiting for the soft morning's light." The book is basically about Bobby and Nia, two sixteen year olds who have a child together. The book is interesting b/c it keeps going back and forth between then (before the baby is born) and now (after the baby is born and living with her dad). Bobby is in school and trying to deal with a newborn who keeps him up all the time and for most of the book you just assume that the mother just left or didn't want the child. It's only at the end of the book that you learn the truth and I will say it surprised me. It was interesting for me b/c when I was reading it, I kept thinking that this boy could be any of the ones I used to watch playing basketball at the rec center, when I worked there. I really enjoyed this book and I honestly will say that I didn't think I would when I was reading the description of the book online.
—Rachel

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