Description:
  Chemistry honors student and cross-country runner Kate Malone is driven.  Daughter of a father who is a reverend first and a parent second ("Rev. Dad  [Version 4.7] is a faulty operating system, incompatible with my software.") and  a dead mother she tries not to remember, Kate has one goal: To escape them both  by gaining entrance to her own holy temple, MIT. Eschewing sleep, she runs  endlessly every night waiting for the sacred college acceptance letter. Then two  disasters occur: Sullen classmate Teri and her younger brother, Mikey, take over  Kate's room when their own house burns down, and a too-thin letter comes from  MIT, signifying denial. And so the experiment begins. Can crude Teri and sweet  Mikey, combined with the rejection letter, form the catalyst that will shake  Kate out of her selfish tunnel vision and force her to deal with the suppressed  pain of her mom's death? "If I could run all the time, life would be fine. As  long as I keep moving, I'm in control." But for Kate, it's time to stop running  and face the feelings she's spent her whole life racing away from.  Catalyst, Laurie Halse Anderson's third novel for teens, is a deftly  fashioned character study of a seldom explored subject in YA fiction: the type-A  adolescent. Teens will identify (if not exactly sympathize) with prickly Kate  instantly, and be shocked or perhaps secretly pleased to discover that life is  no easier for the honor roll student than it is for the outcast. Anderson earns  an A plus for this revealing and realistic take on life, death, and GPAs. (Ages  12 and older) --Jennifer Hubert
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