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macar0ni's review against another edition
4.0
The first Sarah Dessen book and I'm hooked! This book has a great lesson and I thoroughly enjoyed it!
magandsons's review against another edition
4.0
I liked this book and I like this author. When I look in the YA section of the book store I cannot just go by the author, I like this author, I've read other books by her before but I've also left some on the shelf. This one caught my attention because the main character was so fiercely independent. I liked the story and the subtile shift between the characters.
readwithtanyab's review against another edition
3.0
***This book review may contain spoilers. ***
The book was okay. I didn't care much for the main character Ruby. And maybe this is just my age showing considering I love young adult books but am an adult. I just could not take her character for a minute. And her character was well developed but the fact that I did not like her at all brought the star rating down.
It follows Ruby who was living at home alone because her mother ditched her forever. Her sister Cora and husband Jamie take in Ruby and show her what it's really like to be a family. Cora was an absentee sister for about 9 years, mostly because Ruby's mom lied about Cora saying she wanted nothing to do with them. But still to this day, I'm finding it hard to believe Cora, who knowing her mother, just so easily gave up finding Ruby. Hey, it happens though. Ruby had a lot of walls up in the beginning of the book, and walls slightly down toward the end. Her neighbor Nate is the love interest with his own demons that she helped him get through.
The book was predictable. I was glad it was over. Took me forever to read. The main component of the whole story was the key necklace. Makes sense the name of the book.
My Star Rating: 3 out of 5 Stars
The book was okay. I didn't care much for the main character Ruby. And maybe this is just my age showing considering I love young adult books but am an adult. I just could not take her character for a minute. And her character was well developed but the fact that I did not like her at all brought the star rating down.
It follows Ruby who was living at home alone because her mother ditched her forever. Her sister Cora and husband Jamie take in Ruby and show her what it's really like to be a family. Cora was an absentee sister for about 9 years, mostly because Ruby's mom lied about Cora saying she wanted nothing to do with them. But still to this day, I'm finding it hard to believe Cora, who knowing her mother, just so easily gave up finding Ruby. Hey, it happens though. Ruby had a lot of walls up in the beginning of the book, and walls slightly down toward the end. Her neighbor Nate is the love interest with his own demons that she helped him get through.
The book was predictable. I was glad it was over. Took me forever to read. The main component of the whole story was the key necklace. Makes sense the name of the book.
My Star Rating: 3 out of 5 Stars
katinaroberts's review against another edition
4.0
I really enjoyed this book. Sarah Dessen has a clear voice as an author. If you like her other books, you will like this one as well. The story follows Ruby, a girl who is abandoned by her mother. She is 17 and tries really hard to take care of herself so that no one will notice her mom is gone. Although that is a very short part of the story, the majority of the story unfolds as Ruby is living with her sister Cora. I enjoyed the book a lot, but I also really love Sarah Dessen. I would recommend.
obsidian_blue's review against another edition
5.0
What can I really say. I loved this book to pieces. It's been a while since I can say that a book was picture perfect from beginning to end, but I really did find this book worked great. I had no issues with the writing, dialogue, plot, setting or pacing. I went and borrowed a ton of other Sarah Dessen books from the library as soon as I finished "Lock and Key." I read this for the "Key to My Heart" square for Romance Book Bingo 2017.
The main character in "Lock and Key" is Ruby Conner. Ruby is a senior at Jackson High School living in North Carolina. Through bits and pieces we find out that Ruby was in foster care temporarily after it becomes known that she is living alone and her mother is nowhere to be found. Placed with her older sister Cora that she hasn't seen in years, "Lock and Key" is really Ruby's journey learning to figure out what it truly means to be family, and how sometimes the hardest thing to do is stay and just support someone.
I freaking loved Ruby. I mean loved her. I wanted to hug her, give her some chocolate cake, and tell her that she is awesome. I have never fallen so quickly into another teen character's head since Harry Potter. Ruby's vulnerability and her general belief that she could take care of herself with help from no one we see get reworked from the beginning of the book to the end. Ruby and Cora's shaky relationship due to Ruby's belief that her sister had abandoned her we also see slowly changes through the course of the book. I loved that Dessen didn't just throw out hey Ruby you are wrong from other characters either. Ruby had to see and feel that her way or really her mother's way of acting was just not what she needed anymore. Ruby's reluctant friendship with Nate also got me too. I loved how she got to see that someone who she thought had a perfect life, really did not, and that her just saying this is too hard, was actually not what he or she needed.
All of the secondary characters got to shine in this too. I loved Nate. Man oh man, his backstory regarding his mother and his father was just heartbreaking. A kid who doesn't want to be in the situation he is, but doing the best he can until he is 18 and can be free.
Ruby's sister Cora was also such a great character. There is a scene when Cora's husband Jamie is rightfully angry and yelling at Ruby, and Cora steps in front of her like she did when they were kids and their mom was on a tear. I wanted to hug them both. We get to see that Cora is just as unsettled having what she considers a "good" life and not being used to things like huge family dinners, Christmas cards, etc.
I loved Harriet and Reggie, and heck pretty much everyone. Well except for Ruby's old friends at Jackson who she got to see for herself were not true blue friends at all.
The writing takes a look at a lot of things. Drug and alcohol abuse, child abuse, and even abandonment. Dessen does a good job of not prettying things up which I appreciated. I also applaud her since she writes Ruby really well. I have a hard time with some YA authors having teens talking like characters from Dawson's Creek.
That was always my big thing about that show, no one my age sounded that pretentious. Did we sound like asses though? Yes, all teens do at one time or the other.
The flow was great too. We pretty much get to see Ruby over a course of a school year til her graduation which I really appreciated. Spare me from books that have a character do a day/night change in a month or two. It's not realistic. It would have been great to see Ruby in her therapy sessions, but I was happy with what we got.
The setting of Lakeview, North Carolina sounded pretty polarizing. When Ruby is transferred from Jackson to what she considers the rich kid school, I was so happy we didn't see some Mean Girls shtick in this book. We got to see a lot of secondary characters there with tons of nuance as well.
The ending was really great. I can picture Ruby and now her family and her family of choice. I am going to see if Dessen ever follows up on Ruby and others from this book. It looks like she revisits the town of Lakeview in a lot of books, so it be nice to see a shout out to Ruby and other characters we have met.
The main character in "Lock and Key" is Ruby Conner. Ruby is a senior at Jackson High School living in North Carolina. Through bits and pieces we find out that Ruby was in foster care temporarily after it becomes known that she is living alone and her mother is nowhere to be found. Placed with her older sister Cora that she hasn't seen in years, "Lock and Key" is really Ruby's journey learning to figure out what it truly means to be family, and how sometimes the hardest thing to do is stay and just support someone.
I freaking loved Ruby. I mean loved her. I wanted to hug her, give her some chocolate cake, and tell her that she is awesome. I have never fallen so quickly into another teen character's head since Harry Potter. Ruby's vulnerability and her general belief that she could take care of herself with help from no one we see get reworked from the beginning of the book to the end. Ruby and Cora's shaky relationship due to Ruby's belief that her sister had abandoned her we also see slowly changes through the course of the book. I loved that Dessen didn't just throw out hey Ruby you are wrong from other characters either. Ruby had to see and feel that her way or really her mother's way of acting was just not what she needed anymore. Ruby's reluctant friendship with Nate also got me too. I loved how she got to see that someone who she thought had a perfect life, really did not, and that her just saying this is too hard, was actually not what he or she needed.
All of the secondary characters got to shine in this too. I loved Nate. Man oh man, his backstory regarding his mother and his father was just heartbreaking. A kid who doesn't want to be in the situation he is, but doing the best he can until he is 18 and can be free.
Ruby's sister Cora was also such a great character. There is a scene when Cora's husband Jamie is rightfully angry and yelling at Ruby, and Cora steps in front of her like she did when they were kids and their mom was on a tear. I wanted to hug them both. We get to see that Cora is just as unsettled having what she considers a "good" life and not being used to things like huge family dinners, Christmas cards, etc.
I loved Harriet and Reggie, and heck pretty much everyone. Well except for Ruby's old friends at Jackson who she got to see for herself were not true blue friends at all.
The writing takes a look at a lot of things. Drug and alcohol abuse, child abuse, and even abandonment. Dessen does a good job of not prettying things up which I appreciated. I also applaud her since she writes Ruby really well. I have a hard time with some YA authors having teens talking like characters from Dawson's Creek.
That was always my big thing about that show, no one my age sounded that pretentious. Did we sound like asses though? Yes, all teens do at one time or the other.
The flow was great too. We pretty much get to see Ruby over a course of a school year til her graduation which I really appreciated. Spare me from books that have a character do a day/night change in a month or two. It's not realistic. It would have been great to see Ruby in her therapy sessions, but I was happy with what we got.
The setting of Lakeview, North Carolina sounded pretty polarizing. When Ruby is transferred from Jackson to what she considers the rich kid school, I was so happy we didn't see some Mean Girls shtick in this book. We got to see a lot of secondary characters there with tons of nuance as well.
The ending was really great. I can picture Ruby and now her family and her family of choice. I am going to see if Dessen ever follows up on Ruby and others from this book. It looks like she revisits the town of Lakeview in a lot of books, so it be nice to see a shout out to Ruby and other characters we have met.
qeberhard's review against another edition
4.0
This book was absolutely amazing!!! When I first picked it up, I thought that the idea sounded good, but was a little slow, however when I got further into the story, I feel in love with the both the characters and the author!
Ruby is a senior in high school with an abusive mom, who disappeared a few months ago. Now she is taken by social services, and has to go live with her older sister, who ran away a while ago to start a new life. Now Ruby's sister, Cora, is married to the rich man who invented a successful social networking site, called UMe.com. Ruby is put into an expensive school, that is quite nice, the opposite of what Ruby is used to. Will Ruby be able to adjust and make friends? And what happened to Ruby's mother, who disappeared so long ago?!?!?!
You will only find out in... Lock and Key!
Ruby is a senior in high school with an abusive mom, who disappeared a few months ago. Now she is taken by social services, and has to go live with her older sister, who ran away a while ago to start a new life. Now Ruby's sister, Cora, is married to the rich man who invented a successful social networking site, called UMe.com. Ruby is put into an expensive school, that is quite nice, the opposite of what Ruby is used to. Will Ruby be able to adjust and make friends? And what happened to Ruby's mother, who disappeared so long ago?!?!?!
You will only find out in... Lock and Key!
catherine130's review against another edition
3.0
If a contemporary book is your thing then this is it for you. It was alright in my opinion. It's was a bit cliche but I guess all books like this are.
aa2q7's review against another edition
3.0
Hmm, this was fine. I liked it. You get to know the character pretty well, even if some plot points were visible a mile away. There wasn't a ton of resolution in the story aside from a general sense of better-being, but I didn't mind. It is what it is.
Spoiler
Spoiler: Nate's father is abusive.offictionandfantasy's review against another edition
5.0
This book was amazing. All of Sarah Dessen's books are amazing. Her books are always incredibly different and I still manage to find each one relatable. Also, if this book doesn't make you want to get a key necklace, I don't know what will.