Crank

2009 February 10
by Christina

crank1Title: Crank
Author: Ellen Hopkins
Pages: 537
Published: 2004

“Life was good
before I
met
the monster.
After,
life
was great,
At
least
for a little while.

Kristina Georgia Snow is the perfect daughter: gifted high school junior, quiet, never any trouble. But on a trip to visit her absentee father, Kristina disappears and Bree takes her place. Bree is the exact opposite of Kristina – she’s fearless.

Through a boy, Bree meets the monster: crank. And what begins as a wild, ecstatic ride turns into a struggle through heel for her mind, her soul – her life.”

I resisted Crank when it was first recommended to me by Helen. After all, why would I want to read a book about a teenager who starts doing crank, starts tangoing with “the monster” when there are other more uplifting novels out there? But after she pestered me to read it again, and the recommendation was second by a sophomore I know, I decided to give it a try.

Crank is one of those books that just won’t leave you even after you turn the final page or even after it’s been two days since you finished it. It’s unforgettable and sweeps you into the whirlwinds of drugs, sex, and bad choices that have become Kristina’s life.

The way it’s written – free verse rather than a typical, normal narrative – creates a powerfully dramatic, raw, and real story. Some pages have only a few lines on them and on most pages the print only appears on the very right or is centered, but it’s simplicity is what makes it powerful and beautiful all at the same time.

“Crank, you see
isn’t any ordinary
monster. It’s like a
giant octopus,
weaving
its tentacles not
just around you,
but through you,
squeezing
not hard enough to
kill you, but enough
to keep you from
reeling
until you try to get
away. Try, and you
hunger for its
grasping
clutch, the way its
tendrils prop you
up, your need
intensifying
exponentially
every minute you
refuse to admit its
being.” {pg. 468-469}

Hopkins says in her author’s note that Crank was based on a true story – her daughter’s. She wrote the novel in order to understand what her daughter was thinking, and only decided to get it published in order to get teens to stop and think twice. And then think again. But she does more than succeed in this goal, she makes your breath catch in your throat, your stomach roll, and your heart break.

Read this. Now.

I’ve already put the sequel to CrankGlass – on hold, as well as Hopkins’ three other novels – Burned, Impulse, and Identical.

Rating: 5

3 Responses leave one →
  1. 2009 September 11
    sarah permalink

    hey im reading this book and i cant put it down tis sooo amazing and really true. iv known to many ppl to end up in bad situation when they do the drug. so it really hits home when someone rights about it…

  2. 2009 September 20

    k v read this book like 6 times it is so good.my favorite line is im the face in the mirror only not.this book is so trippy,everytime i read it i get a new feeling out of it.rather if it a good or bad i dont care i love this book.im tring to read some of her others like glass or impules preferable all of them but i cant i dont got money to buy them so im just gunna stick with crank.hopeffully some day i get a chance to read the rest if not so wat m glad i found one and only one book i like in my entirte life.!

  3. 2009 October 29
    Jessie permalink

    After reading Crank and Glass i have a little bit of an understanding of what my sister went throw when she was on the shit sometimes i feel bad for the way i felt towards my sister.. But my sister is off the shit now has been for like eight years I am so proud of her. Thanks for letting me see the truth behind it all…

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