0

    Burned

    4.4 885

    by Ellen Hopkins


    Paperback

    (Reissue ed.)

    $11.99
    $11.99

    Customer Reviews

    • ISBN-13: 9781442494619
    • Publisher: Margaret K. McElderry Books
    • Publication date: 09/10/2013
    • Edition description: Reissue ed.
    • Pages: 560
    • Sales rank: 16,530
    • Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.25(h) x 0.00(d)
    • Lexile: HL710L (what's this?)
    • Age Range: 14 - 18 Years

    Ellen Hopkins is the #1 New York Times bestselling author of thirteen young adult novels, as well as the adult novels Triangles, Collateral, and Love Lies Beneath. She lives with her family in Carson City, Nevada, where she founded Ventana Sierra, a nonprofit youth housing and resource initiative. Visit her at EllenHopkins.com and on Facebook, and follow her on Twitter at @EllenHopkinsLit.

    Read an Excerpt


    From Burned

    Did You Ever

    When you were little, endure

    your parents' warnings, then wait

    for them to leave the room,

    pry loose protective covers

    and consider inserting some metal

    object into an electrical outlet?

    Did you wonder if for once

    you might light up the room?

    When you were big enough

    to cross the street on your own,

    did you ever wait for a signal,

    hear the frenzied approach

    of a fire truck and feel like

    stepping out in front of it?

    Did you wonder just how far

    that rocket ride might take you?

    When you were almost grown,

    did you ever sit in a bubble bath,

    perspiration pooling,

    notice a blow-dryer plugged

    in within easy reach, and think

    about dropping it into the water?

    Did you wonder if the expected

    rush might somehow fail you?

    And now, do you ever dangle

    your toes over the precipice,

    dare the cliff to crumble,

    defy the frozen deity to suffer

    the sun, thaw feather and bone,

    take wing to fly you home?

    I, Pattyn Scarlet Von Stratten, do.

    I'm Not Exactly Sure

    When I began to feel that way.

    Maybe a little piece of me

    always has. It's hard to remember.

    But I do know things really

    began to spin out of control

    after my first sex dream.

    As sex dreams go, there wasn't

    much sex, just a collage

    of very hot kisses, and Justin Proud's

    hands, exploring every inch

    of my body, at my fervent

    invitation. As a stalwart Mormon

    high school junior, drilled

    ceaselessly about the dire

    catastrophe awaiting those

    who harbored impure thoughts,

    I had never kissed a boy,

    had never even considered

    that I might enjoy such

    an unclean thing, until

    literature opened my eyes.

    See, the Library

    was my sanctuary.

    Through middle

    school, librarians

    were like guardian

    angels. Spinsterish

    guardian angels,

    with graying hair

    and beady eyes,

    magnified through

    reading glasses,

    and always ready

    to recommend new

    literary windows

    to gaze through.

    A. A. Milne. Beatrix

    Potter. Lewis

    Carroll. Kenneth

    Grahame. E. B.

    White. Beverly

    Cleary. Eve Bunting.

    Then I started high

    school, where the

    not-so-bookish

    librarian was half

    angel, half she-devil,

    so sayeth the rumor

    mill. I hardly cared.

    Ms. Rose was all

    I could hope I might

    one day be: aspen

    physique, new penny

    hair, aurora green

    eyes, and hands that

    could speak. She

    walked on air. Ms

    Rose shuttered old

    windows, opened

    portals undreamed of.

    And just beyond,

    what fantastic worlds!

    I Met Her My Freshman Year

    All wide-eyed and dim about starting high school,

    a big new school, with polished hallways

    and hulking lockers and doors that led

    who-knew-where?

    A scary new school, filled with towering

    teachers and snickering students,

    impossible schedules, tough expectations,

    and endless possibilities.

    The library, with its paper perfume,

    whispered queries, and copy

    machine shuffles, was the only familiar

    place on the entire campus.

    And there was Ms. Rose.

    How can I help you?

    Fresh off a fling with C. S.

    Lewis and Madeleine L'Engle,

    hungry for travel far from home,

    I whispered, "Fantasy, please."

    She smiled. Follow me.

    I know just where to take you.

    I shadowed her to Tolkien's

    Middle-earth and Rowling's

    School of Witchcraft and Wizardry,

    places no upstanding Mormon should go.

    When you finish those,

    I'd be happy to show you more.

    Fantasy Segued into Darker Dimensions

    And authors who used three whole names:

    Vivian Vande Velde, Annette Curtis Klause.

    Mary Downing Hahn.

    By my sophomore year, I was deep

    into adult horror -- King, Koontz, Rice.

    You must try classic horror,

    insisted Ms. Rose.

    Poe, Wells, Stoker. Stevenson. Shelley.

    There's more to life than monsters.

    You'll love these authors:

    Burroughs. Dickens. Kipling. London.

    Bradbury. Chaucer. Henry David Thoreau.

    And these:

    Jane Austen. Arthur Miller. Charlotte Brontë.

    F. Scott Fitzgerald. J. D. Salinger.

    By my junior year, I devoured increasingly

    adult fare. Most, I hid under my dresser:

    D. H. Lawrence. Truman Capote.

    Ken Kesey. Jean Auel.

    Mary Higgins Clark. Danielle Steel.

    I Began

    To view the world at large

    through borrowed eyes,

    eyes more like those

    I wanted to own.

    Hopeful.

    I began

    to see that it was more than

    okay -- it was, in some circles,

    expected -- to question my

    little piece of the planet.

    Empowered.

    I began

    to understand that I could

    stretch if I wanted to, explore

    if I dared, escape

    if I just put one foot

    in front of the other.

    Enlightened.

    I began

    to realize that escape

    might offer the only real

    hope of freedom from my

    supposed God-given roles --

    wife and mother of as many

    babies as my body could bear.

    Emboldened.

    I Also Began to Journal

    Okay, one of the things expected of Latter-

    Day Saints is keeping a journal.

    But I'd always considered it just another

    "supposed to," one not to worry much about.

    Besides, what would I write in a book

    everyone was allowed to read?

    Some splendid nonfiction chronicle

    about sharing a three-bedroom house

    with six younger sisters, most of whom

    I'd been required to diaper?

    Some suspend-your-disbelief fiction

    about how picture-perfect life was at home,

    forget the whole dysfunctional truth

    about Dad's alcohol-fueled tirades?

    Some brilliant manifesto about how God

    whispered sweet insights into my ear,

    higher truths that I would hold on to forever,

    once I'd shared them through testimony?

    Or maybe they wanted trashy confessions --

    Daydreams Designed by Satan.

    Whatever. I'd never written but a few

    words in my mandated diary.

    Maybe it was the rebel in me.

    Or maybe it was just the lazy in me.

    But faithfully penning a journal

    was the furthest thing from my mind.

    Ms. Rose Had Other Ideas

    One day I brought a stack of books,

    most of them banned in decent LDS

    households, to the checkout counter.

    Ms. Rose looked up and smiled.

    You are quite the reader, Pattyn.

    You'll be a writer one day, I'll venture.

    I shook my head. "Not me.

    Who'd want to read anything

    I have to say?"

    She smiled. How about you?

    Why don't you start

    with a journal?

    So I gave her the whole

    lowdown about why journaling

    was not my thing.

    A very good reason to keep

    a journal just for you. One

    you don't have to write in.

    A day or two later, she gave

    me one -- plump, thin-lined,

    with a plain denim cover.

    Decorate it with your words,

    she said. And don't be afraid

    of what goes inside.

    I Wasn't Sure What She Meant

    Until I opened the stiff-paged volume

    and started to write.

    At first, rather ordinary fare

    garnished the lines.

    Feb. 6. Good day at school. Got an A

    on my history paper.

    Feb. 9. Roberta has strep throat. Great!

    Now we'll all get it.

    But as the year progressed, I began

    to feel I was living in a stranger's body.

    Mar. 15. Justin Proud smiled at me today.

    I can't believe it! And I can't believe

    how it made me feel. Kind of tingly all over,

    like I had an itch I didn't want to scratch.

    An itch you-know-where.

    Mar. 17. I dreamed about Justin last night.

    Dreamed he kissed me, and I kissed him back,

    and I let him touch me all over my body

    and I woke up all hot and blushing.

    Blushing! Like I'd done something wrong.

    Can a dream be wrong?

    Aren't dreams God's way

    of telling you things?

    Justin Proud

    Was one of the designated

    "hot bods" on campus.

    No surprise all the girls

    hotly pursued that bod.

    The only surprise was my

    subconscious interest.

    I mean, he was anything

    but a good Mormon boy.

    And I, allegedly being

    a good Mormon girl,

    was supposed to keep

    my feminine thoughts pure.

    Easy enough, while struggling

    with stacks of books,

    piles of paper, and mounds

    of adolescent angst.

    Easy enough, while chasing

    after a herd of siblings,

    each the product of lustful,

    if legally married, behavior.

    Easy enough, while watching

    other girls pant after him.

    But just how do you maintain

    pure thoughts when you dream?

    Copyright ©2006 by Ellen Hopkins

    Reading Group Guide

    A Reading Group Guide to Burned by Ellen Hopkins

    ABOUT THE BOOK

    Pattyn Scarlet Von Stratten, a Mormon teen, spends most of her time caring for her younger siblings and resenting her mother’s submissive role and her father’s abusive behavior. Like many teen girls, Pattyn has a sex dream about a boy; however, raised in a household with strict religious beliefs, Pattyn wonders if dreaming about sex is wrong and begins asking questions about sex, God, a woman’s role, and love. Afraid of her alcoholic and abusive father and detached from her overworked and depressed mother, Pattyn poses questions to Brother Prior but receives no satisfactory answers. Derek Colthorpe begins paying attention to Pattyn; though Pattyn knows what she feels is lust and not love, her need to be with him is intense. When Pattyn’s father catches her in a compromising position with Derek, a non-Mormon teen, tensions between Pattyn and her father escalate, and he sends her to spend the summer on a ranch with an aunt she does not know. Pattyn is expected to find salvation and redemption during her time in rural Nevada, but Aunt J, opposing the rigidity of her brother’s religion, teaches Pattyn about acceptance and love. Pattyn falls in love with Ethan, the son of Aunt J’s old friend, but knowing her mother and siblings need her help and are victims of her father’s abuse, she returns to her family at the end of summer, leaving Ethan behind. Pattyn stays in contact with Ethan via phone, but when events take a tragic turn, Pattyn learns, despite her time with her aunt, that she cannot escape her demons.

    PREREADING ACTIVITY

    When bad things happen to good people, people sometimes comment that “life is not fair.” What impact, however, does “randomness,” the idea that bad things happen randomly to both “good” and “bad” people, have on this comment?

    Can you think of a time in which you felt betrayed? Explain. A time in which you believed a turn of events was unfair? Explain.

    DISCUSSION QUESTIONS

    In what way is Pattyn’s life different from that of the typical teenage girl? How is it similar? How does she fit in at her school?

    A librarian encourages Pattyn to read and gives her a journal in which to write her thoughts. What doors does the librarian open for Pattyn?

    Why does Pattyn resent her mother’s role as a parent and wife? Speculate as to why Pattyn does not accept a similar life for herself.

    How is Pattyn confused by the concept of free will?

    Pattyn knows that she is not in love with Derek Colthorpe, and yet she is attracted to him. What accounts for this attraction? How does Derek fill a void?

    Despite Pattyn’s resentment toward her father, she still yearns for his acceptance. Cite a passage that illustrates her longing for her father’s attention.

    What accounts for her parents’ unhappiness?

    Aunt J is intuitive. She understands Pattyn’s confusion and sense of guilt and her need to be loved and to belong. What common experiences connect Aunt J and her niece?

    How is Pattyn’s life different on the ranch with Aunt J? How does Pattyn grow during the summer with her aunt?

    How does Aunt J help Pattyn celebrate her birthday? Why does her aunt spend so much on her?

    What does Pattyn learn about boy/girl relationships from Ethan? Why does Aunt J encourage their relationship?

    Compare and contrast Derek and Ethan.

    Why does Pattyn feel a need to return home to her family, knowing she has escaped her father’s abusive behavior and found love and acceptance in her aunt’s house?

    Aunt J tells Pattyn that Pattyn gave Aunt J her life back. What does Aunt J mean?

    Is Pattyn able to stand up against her father’s abuse once she returns home? Why or why not?

    What happens at the end of the story that sends Pattyn spiraling back down? How does she feel betrayed?

    ACTIVITIES

    Write a follow-up chapter to the last scene in the book that sets up a sequel in which Pattyn is saved. What would need to happen in this chapter to turn the story around?

    Research the effects of emotional abuse on children. What accounts for a person being raised in an abusive environment not feeling “good enough” or “deserving”? If children do not come to terms with these feelings, how might these feelings impact them in adult relationships? What differences might exist between men and women?

    Research nuclear testing in the state of Nevada. How have people and the environment been affected, and how has the government made compensation? What measures have been put in place in our country to protect citizens from nuclear disaster?

    Research summer experiences (camps for teens, for example) that might help arm young people who have grown up in wounded families with stronger coping skills? How would one go about finding out which of these experiences would be helpful and which might prove more damaging?

    Guide prepared by Pam B. Cole, Professor of English Education & Literacy, Kennesaw State University, Kennesaw, GA.

    This guide has been provided by Simon & Schuster for classroom, library, and reading group use. It may be reproduced in its entirety or excerpted for these purposes.

    Eligible for FREE SHIPPING details

    Choose Expedited Delivery at checkout for delivery by. Monday, October 14

    Pattyn Von Stratten is searching for the love she isn’t getting from God or her family in this novel from #1 New York Times bestselling author Ellen Hopkins.

    It all started with a dream. Just a typical fantasy, but for a girl raised in a religious—and abusive—family, a simple dream could be the first step toward eternal damnation. Now Pattyn Von Stratten has questions. Questions about God, and sex, and mostly love. Will she ever find it? Pattyn experiences the first stirrings of passion, but when her father catches her in a compromising position, events spiral out of control.

    Pattyn is sent to live with an aunt in the wilds of rural Nevada to find salvation and redemption. What she finds instead is love and acceptance, and for the first time she feels worthy of both—until she realizes that her old demons will not let her go. Those demons lead Pattyn down a path to hell—not to the place she learned about in sacrament meetings, but to an existence every bit as horrifying.

    In this gripping and masterful novel told in verse, Ellen Hopkins embarks on an emotional journey that ebbs and flows. From the highs of true love to the lows of loss and despair, Pattyn’s story is utterly compelling. You won’t want this story to end—but when it does, you can find out what’s next for Pattyn in the sequel, Smoke.

    Read More

    Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought

    Recently Viewed 

    • Burned
      Average rating: 4.4 Average rating:
    From the Publisher
    Compelling characters in horrific situations.”
    School Library Journal

    “troubling . . . beautifully written.”
    Booklist

    Booklist
    troubling . . . beautifully written.”
    Booklist
    Children's Literature - Janice DeLong
    Told in blank verse, this is the story of seventeen-year-old Pattyn (named for General George Patton) Von Stratten, and her Mormon household. Dominated by an abusive father, this is a dysfunctional family held together only by their religious loyalties. Pattyn is the oldest of seven girls and as such, inherits much of the care of her siblings. With little time to spend on herself and even less to consider healthy friendship with opposite sex, Pattyn becomes easy prey to high school Romeo’s with lustful intentions. Much of the text of this title depicts vivid sex play with no sense of real love or even companionship. When Pattyn is not involved physically with a male, she is thinking about either how it would be or how it was. Eventually, her attachments get the rising senior into trouble at school and her parents send her away for the summer to her aunt’s ranch in Nevada. In this almost blissful existence away from her demanding and miserable family, Pattyn finds love and acceptance with her aunt, and, no surprise here, another male. As the continuing narrative unfolds, Pattyn engages in more sexual foreplay, fantasy, and finally culmination. By the end of the book, our hero has become pregnant, lost the baby and the baby’s father as well as whatever shaky faith she had in God. Having committed murder, Pattyn has also become a fugitive from the law. There is no encouragement, no peace, no light at the end of the tunnel. The only positive value to be found in this sad and sex-riddled tale is that with little dialogue and less description, the five-hundred-thirty-one pages move swiftly and the determined reader does not have to suffer long. Reviewer: Janice DeLong; Ages 17 up.
    Sign In Create an Account
    Search Engine Error - Endeca File Not Found