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Bully : does anyone deserve to die? ; a true story of high school revenge / Jim Schutze

By: Publisher: New York : William Morrow And Company Inc, 1997Description: 289 pages : illustrated ; 25 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 068813517X
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 364.1523 .Sch396
Summary: As harrowing as Lord of the Flies and as unsettling as Larry Clark's Kids, Bully is the true story of an unspeakable act of revenge committed by ordinary, middle-class teenagers. Unlike anything you have ever heard of - or even imagined - before, Bully reveals the virulent hatred and lust for control that lurked within one boy. At once startling and mesmerizing, Bully asks just what kind of vengeance is justified for society's cruelest people. Jim Schutze's trademark precision and investigative savvy bring us into the confusing, duplicitous world of Bobby Kent and Marty Puccio, when grew up together in a peaceful beach community of Fort Lauderdale. Best buddies since boyhood, they shared a love for fast cars, fun-loving girls and their weight-toned bodies. At their core, however, the boys couldn't have been more different. Marty was gentle and kind and would go to any length to please others. Bobby, meanwhile, was a bully. His spirit was mean, his will strong and his modus operandi sadism. Bobby's ambition was to rule his pack and to dominate Marty and his girlfriend, Lisa. At the end of the eleventh grade, their psychological, physical and sexual weaknesses were Bobby's prey. What these suburban teenagers did one night on the swampy edge of the Everglades is a harrowing commentary on our society and the intensity of adolescent rage. But just as startling are the lengths to which the kids' parents went to protect their young and what their actions reveal about the meaning of individual responsibility at the close of the century. Bully is a story so unthinkable that it can't be true, but so familiar in the emotions it evokes that it can't be anything but real. - Provided by the publisher
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Print Materials Main Library General Circulation 364.1523 .Sch396 1997 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 0108015

As harrowing as Lord of the Flies and as unsettling as Larry Clark's Kids, Bully is the true story of an unspeakable act of revenge committed by ordinary, middle-class teenagers. Unlike anything you have ever heard of - or even imagined - before, Bully reveals the virulent hatred and lust for control that lurked within one boy. At once startling and mesmerizing, Bully asks just what kind of vengeance is justified for society's cruelest people. Jim Schutze's trademark precision and investigative savvy bring us into the confusing, duplicitous world of Bobby Kent and Marty Puccio, when grew up together in a peaceful beach community of Fort Lauderdale. Best buddies since boyhood, they shared a love for fast cars, fun-loving girls and their weight-toned bodies. At their core, however, the boys couldn't have been more different. Marty was gentle and kind and would go to any length to please others. Bobby, meanwhile, was a bully. His spirit was mean, his will strong and his modus operandi sadism. Bobby's ambition was to rule his pack and to dominate Marty and his girlfriend, Lisa. At the end of the eleventh grade, their psychological, physical and sexual weaknesses were Bobby's prey. What these suburban teenagers did one night on the swampy edge of the Everglades is a harrowing commentary on our society and the intensity of adolescent rage. But just as startling are the lengths to which the kids' parents went to protect their young and what their actions reveal about the meaning of individual responsibility at the close of the century. Bully is a story so unthinkable that it can't be true, but so familiar in the emotions it evokes that it can't be anything but real. - Provided by the publisher

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