What Would Emma Do Pdf Downloads

Posted on: 12/3/2017 / Admin
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What Would Emma Do Pdf Downloads

We understand that Emma emails go away after 18 months, and we would like to be able to save a PDF version for our records. While the 'Save webview as a PDF' is a nice feature - it would be extremely beneficial to be able to save as a PDF with working links, so the entire mailing is not all on one page. Download free Adobe Acrobat Reader DC software for your Windows, Mac OS and Android devices to view, print, and comment on PDF documents.

Title: What Would Emma Do? Author: Publication Info: Simon Pulse December 2008 ISBN: Genre: What Would Emma Do is a smart, unblinking mixture of “The Crucible” meets “Saved,” with one of the most memorable YA narrators I’ve met in awhile.

However, it’s not a romance, so I’m not evaluating it as such. More on that in a moment. Emma is the only daughter of a single mom in a small Illinois Indiana* town named Wheaton, which is situated exactly in the middle of rural nowhere. Emma really, really hates living there. Her goal is a track scholarship to Northwestern, and she’s not secret about her goals, or her intense dislike of every aspect of her town. She thinks of it as her mom’s hometown, not her own, and is repulsed by the eagerness with which her mom and her friends and all the adults in her life embrace the town’s social culture, which, to Emma, involves being way to involved in everyone else’s business, and being as limited of mind as possible. * I mistakenly placed the town in Illinois, and the error was totally mine.

My apologies to Ms. Emma is out one night with her best friend’s boyfriend, Colin, whom she’s known since early early childhood. After a surprise kiss a few weeks prior, their friendship isn’t yet back to normal, but she’s trying to make it so. When she and Colin sneak out to go to a local hangout – as friends, not to get it on or anything – they find two the popular girls in the middle of a bit of a bender, but the next morning, the story is totally different. Some evil invasion is poisoning the popular girls! One by one they are fainting in school, plauged by a mysterious and dramatic illness! It’s terrorism!

But it’s absolutely NOT the fault of the two young innocent girls. Colin and Emma know a totally different story, but neither is willing to speak up, until the entire mess spirals out of control. The hypocritical insanity and hyperventilation of holier-than-thou teens builds through the novel, and Emma finds herself and her own slowly solidifying moral code compromised by that hypocrisy because she doesn’t speak up when she knows the truth. In the beginning, I thought some of the religious figures and character portrayals are almost too fervent and too over the top to be believed, but after thinking about it, I realized: that was wishful thinking on my part. I’ve seen enough examples of those who are fervent and firmly-entrenched in their belief system to the point of demonizing anyone who thinks differently to know that the surrounding characters might seem outlandish, but they’re not necessarily unreal. They’re also not necessarily bad or evil. They are, however, rigid and threatened by change and obvious difference.

While I know some folks get itchy at the deep point-of-view of first person storytelling, I loved the snarky, sarcastic first-person narration and witnessing the evolution of Emma’s growing self-awareness and feelings of isolation and ostracization. The story features multiple portrayals of groupthink mentality, especially when the town as a whole is confronted with religious dogma, social pressure, plain old everyday gossip, or someone finally taking the risk to stand up and confront the mob. And there’s the hilarious narration, like this scene where Emma’s mom finds a calendar under Emma’s bed on which Emma crosses out the days until she can graduate and leave Wheaton: When my mom is upset, she talks in cliches. If you really want to tick her off, be sure to mention it. “I do not understand your hatred for this town.” “Whenever I try to explain it to you, you get mad.” “I get mad because you’re building castles in the air and don’t have your feet on the ground.” “Castles in the air?” I asked.

Great, now she was starting to sound like the weird seveties ballads she loves. Soon she’d start talking about nights in white satin and horses named Wildfire. I completely believed that an intelligent high school senior was telling me this story. I trusted her narration and I thought she was hilarious. There were, however, some things I didn’t like. First, and this is a bit spoilerish: there is an ambiguous ending that wasn’t secure enough in the happy future of the heroine, despite my rooting for her and watching her struggle with her own ambivalence and disgust with herself and with the people around her. I wanted to know more that she was ok.

Her narration ended too soon. The final scenes are realistic, and hopeful, but I wanted more. But what really confused me was the disconnect between the cover copy and the story itself: “There is no greater sin than kissing your best friend’s boyfriend.

Especially since she maybe kinda wants to do it again.” First, the kiss was not at all the primary plot point of the story. If you were expecting a friends to more-than-that plot line, or a romance plot at all, you’ll be disappointed. There are romantic elements to the story, and two potentially marvelous heroes, but in the end, I felt like the cover of the book wanted to convince me that it was a romance, when the contests were anything but. Here: take a look at a large scale image of the cover: He’s smiling, they’re half in the bushes, and it looks silly and impetuous. The front cover blurb is, “If you want it that bad, it can’t be good,” and I presume that refers to the kissing—but it doesn’t. Part of the subtext of the book itself is whether Emma can overcome feelings of guilt for wanting things that everyone in the town thinks she’s addled for desiring so badly—things like leaving, moving on outside of town, and discovering the rest of the world outside the county line. And for that, I have to grade the publisher’s art department and marketing department a D, because the image itself is visually interesting.

That’s a great cover image—for a YA Romance. The couple kissing on the cover is enthusiastic, a little awkward, and as a result drew me in. Paired with the blurb about wanting to kiss the best friend’s boyfriend again, well, that doesn’t represent the contents of the book any more than the old skool image of Fabio on the cover of represented the nuanced storytelling inside. However, the disappointment I felt as a result of the packaging does not detract from the quality of the story.

It’s outrageously intelligent, funny, compelling, and thought-provoking. Emma struggles with her attraction to two different guys, but more than that, she struggles with the compulsion to speak up for the truth even if doing so could cost her everything, including her ticket out of Wheaton.

Emma tries to have it both ways: fix the wrong without standing up for what’s right. She thinks she can challenge the authority anonymously, without getting her hands dirty and paying the typical and painful social consequences. As YA with romantic elements, or YA in and of itself, it’s pretty sharp. It’s a funny, funny book dealing with serious themes and an underlying sadness and lonlieness that will resonate anyone who has at one point realized they are different from the herd. Emma is realizing things about herself, her life, and the limitations of the community in which she lives that I think most people face at one time or another, and her experience is familiar and not always fun to revisit. Cook is a talented writer, and has a great voice for YA. I just wish the packaging and the marketing better matched the book itself.

It’s a solidly thought-provoking story, but folks looking for a romance will be disappointed – though I hope they can look past the mismatch between the cover and the contents to appreciate the contents for their quality. 1+ Wow, I guess I’m just hopping on the bandwagon. I live about 15 miles from Wheaton, and I can tell you emphatically that it is in no way the type of “small town” where you’d imagine life is like living in a fish bowl. I have relatives who live in tiny, rural towns in southern Indiana where literally everyone knows every single other person in town, and where I could imagine the story that is described in this review could conceivably happen. I hope that the author’s selection of this particular town was just based on a general lack of knowledge about the suburbs of Chicago (Wheaton is a far suburb, true, but plenty of people commute to the city).

I wonder if she did what I sometimes do when trying to determine settings which is rely a little too heavily on statistical and population data supplied by websites. Or maybe she’s from the area and views it differently than I do. I know I shouldn’t let this little buggaboo dissuade me from reading the story, but I would never be able to get over it. With every mention of the setting, I’d be shaking my head that she’d gotten it wrong. 1+ Same objection here. Wheaton isn’t a small town in the slightest. And if she was intending it to be the real Wheaton – possible, given Wheaton College and the Billy Graham Center, and the religion angle of the story – then she’s fundamentally missing a big part of the culture of the suburbs.

None of them are insular. You may live in one, work in another, send your kids to school in yet another one, and shop there towns over.

Even the small suburbs don’t behave like small towns. And if she wasn’t intending it to be the real Wheaton – well, it’s not that hard to check names you make up. That would bug me a lot if I tried to read this book.

(As an aside, there is a Wheaton, Wisconsin outside Eau Claire that looks to be slightly more than a wide spot in the road, but Eau Claire’s a long way from Wheaton, Illinois.). 1+ I couldn’t read any further than the Wheaton comment either. Lived there, worked there, churched there. No way is it rural. This is the same reason I can’t read the Jim Butcher books: in the very first few pages of book one, he referred to “midtown Chicago” as his location in the city.

If he’d said the Loop, if he’d said nearly anything else, we’d probably still be on reading terms, but midtown? Not gonna happen. And of course, I should be big enough to let these infractions slide, but with the TBR Pile of Death, there’s really no need. 1+ This book was witty, clever and beautifully written. I am a huge fan of Cook’s writing.

I hate to see good authors get screwed by their cover (a thing no writer can control) and its too bad such a smart story was marketed as a YA romance. Even my local B and N put it on the YA romance table. Its as though marketing was tired that day and just wanted to get out of the office early for a long weekend when they said, “Screw it, we’ll market it as a romance cause teens love romance and we can go home early.

They’ll never know the difference.” Jackasses. This is the second time Ms.

Intonation In Context Rapidshare Premium there. Cook has been screwed over by the cover gods. Her first book, an adult romance comedy entitled Unpredictable missed release date because stores refused to carry the fud-ugly cover that marketed gave it.

It ended up being pushed back a WHOLE YEAR and still given a new cover because of that fiasco. Then RT wouldn’t even rerun the review featuring the new cover when it finally released. BTW it earned 4 and a half stars. Pick up What Would Emma Do?

Just because its a smart and savvy read. Cover be damned. Neodownloader 2 9 Build 165 Pounds. And if your in the mood for romance? Order Unpredictable as well.

It’s a damn good read as well. 1+ Color me corrected, too! Like I said, I have relatives that live in small-town rural Indiana, so setting the story in fictional “Wheaton, IN” would be perfect IMO to convey a place where everyone knows everyone’s business, no secrets are kept, and religion plays a very heavy role in guiding the actions of the people who live there. I’ll put this book on my list to check out next time I’m at the bookstore – the premise does sound intriguing. Not to mention it’s a double read – I might like it as well as my daughter.

Hi Mary, You beat me to it! Newer versions of IE and Outlook can block.xlsx files. It will go through to gmail or through Microsoft products if in an.xls format. The mail client, browser and operating system are going to interact with that link in different ways, for example when I tried using Gmail on Chrome, I downloaded the excel file automatically One thing you could do to ensure that everyone is able to download it would be to host it somewhere such as your website and then link to that page. Just a thought, otherwise most should be be able to download it assuming everything is up to date.

Otherwise I can see you have a PDF version there too which is going to be a bit more responsive as it can be displayed in most browsers. Please feel free to let me know if you have any further questions:).