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The final book in the series finds Boone coming to terms with changes in his life as well as those of both his birth family and the family he is creating. Figures from his past reappear, trying to pull him back into his previous life, while his mother, his best friend, his first love, and his girlfriend's family all face major changes of their own. The decisions Boone must make take him into unfamiliar landscapes and provide him with both opportunity and the reality of severing ties with his past.
The Boone Series is the story of a teenager on the fringes of society. He doesn't have looks, or money, or education going for him, but he's a decent human being trying to grow up with the odds stacked against him. He is often belittled or ignored, but like others out there on the edge of things, he has a story that deserves to be heard. In "Keeping Secrets," we see and hear what is happening from Boone's point of view, just as we do in the first two books in the series, "Pushing Back" and "Matching Scars."Boone is building a marginal but relatively comfortable life for himself and Frankie when two figures from his past reappear and life becomes irritating and complicated all over again. His old enemy Jerry and his aunt Claire are both making demands on him that he is either unwilling or unable to satisfy, and while he's dealing with them, the old habits his daddy saddled him with continue to strain his relationship with Nancy.Staying away from Jerry, keeping his aunt at a distance, and trying to reconcile with Nancy all at the same time is difficult enough, but Boone's anger and impulsive nature make it almost impossible. He and Tiny are trying with limited success to carry on Gamaliel's legacy, and some of the residents at the assisted living home are urging him to step out into the world and enjoy himself. Mark, who has become the kind of mentor Boone didn't think he would ever have, offers what he can in the way of support and encouragement, but Boone's own personal history is hard for him to escape. He's continually torn between curiosity about the life he's missing out on and his long-held anger and insecurity.A crisis on Tiny's farm not only rekindles Boone's old fears that the secrets he's kept for so long are about to come out, but also alters his friendship with Tiny, eliminating one common bond that was holding them together. What seems to be the final blow to his relationship with Nancy, the weight of memories that surround him, and the increasing pressure from all sides to make some kind of move, are all pushing Boone toward a decision he never thought he would make.
The Boone Series is the story of a teenager on the fringes of society. He doesn't have looks, or money, or education going for him, but he's a decent human being trying to grow up with the odds stacked against him. He is often belittled or ignored, but like others out there on the edge of things, he has a story that deserves to be heard. In "Matching Scars," we see and hear what is happening from Boone's point of view, just as we do in the first book in the series, "Pushing Back."On his own and struggling with the possibility of losing his friend Gamaliel, Boone is taking more responsibility for maintaining the old man's home while he recuperates. His conflicts with Gamaliel's son-in-law Jerry are increasing in frequency and intensity, and his relationship with his new friend Tiny is getting stronger; Tiny's practical knowledge of how the adult world works is invaluable to Boone, and he has Boone's back on more than one occasion.The everyday demands of adult life are new and sometimes confusing for Boone; using a bank, applying for a driver's license, grocery shopping, laundry, caring for his dog Frankie, all seem more difficult for him than for everybody around him. His mother's reappearance in his life serves only to bring a new and much more intense level of disappointment, since he catches only a glimpse of her before she is gone again, with only a note left behind. For Boone, family is starting to become something very different and in many ways more substantial than what it used to be when he was a child. He still pushes those close to him away, but not as often or as strongly as before, and his maturing relationship with Nancy is frightening and exciting all at the same time.The decisions he has to make now have more serious consequences, and the ghosts of his past are never far away. He can still feel his father's influence, try as he might to shake loose from it, and while his intense emotions often make his life more difficult, sometimes that intensity is exactly what he has to call on to survive.
The Boone Series is the story of a teenager on the fringes of society. He doesn't have looks, or money, or education going for him, but he's a decent human being trying to grow up with the odds stacked against him. He is often belittled or ignored, but like others out there on the edge of things, he has a story that deserves to be heard. "Pushing Back" is told from Boone's point of view. The first book in the series finds Boone at sixteen years old, in a family he can't wait to escape. His father is an angry drunk who scrapes out a living doing farm work and takes out most of his frustration and rage on his family. Boone's mother is a passive sort, unable or unwilling to stand up to her husband, and his sister is only seven, so he feels like he can't leave. Then, in one weekend, his family disintegrates around him and Boone finds himself alone for the first time in his life. Soon he begins to realize how much of his father's anger and mistrust is also a part of him, and much of his struggle to become an adult revolves around trying to let go of most of what his daddy taught him. Circumstance brings him into contact with an elderly neighbor, and he and Gamaliel form an unlikely friendship. Gamaliel's son-in-law has nothing but contempt for Boone and the conflicts with him bring out the worst in Boone's character. Boone's low social standing and his inexperience with most kinds of relationships makes his growing involvement with Nancy, a former classmate, full of stumbles and missteps on his part and a determination on hers to make things work, even though she has her share of normal teenage insecurity as well. A decent person at heart, Boone's battle with his inner demons and his almost complete lack of knowledge about the adult world make his progress intermittent at best, full of setbacks often of his own making. He approaches maturity clumsily, but when he can figure out the right thing to do, he usually does it. Unfortunately for him and those around him, sometimes his anger and insecurity get in the way.
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