Praise
for Rainbow High:
What
Professional Journal Reviewers say about Rainbow High:
From
Publisher's Weekly:
Sanchez returns to the lives of Nelson, Kyle and Jason-the three likable
gay characters he created in Rainbow Boys, infusing his sequel
with romance and humor. As the author rotates through the connecting
stories, even readers unfamiliar with the first book will quickly be
engrossed: Nelson is dating HIV-positive Jeremy; Kyle's been accepted
to Princeton, but doesn't want to go to college away from his boyfriend,
Jason; and Jason risks his own college scholarship when he comes out
to his basketball team and catches the media's attention. As with the
first novel, the author incorporates some education along with the plotting:
in addition to facts about HIV, for instance, complementary story lines
demonstrate how Jason and Kyle's coaches each deal with the boys' sexuality
(in Jason's case: "By handling the whole thing the way he had,
Coach had shown the team they could handle it"). Readers may be
more likely to get swept up in Nelson's fights with his mom over his
right to date Jeremy, Jason's on-camera denial of having a boyfriend,
and of course, the steamy love scenes; indeed this novel shares many
of the characteristics of a typical teen romance novel ("In the
three-way mirror [Jason's] tall, handsome reflection extended time after
time toward infinity.... Kyle thought himself the luckiest boy on earth").
The author expertly mixes coming-out issues with the universal complications
of first love in this novel that culminates in the boys' senior prom.
Ages 12-up. (Nov.) Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.
From
KLIATT - Paula Rohrlick
Now in their senior year of high school, the three gay youths we first
met in Rainbow Boys are struggling with new issues. Wisecracking, impulsive
Nelson, who is "out and outrageous," is being tested for HIV
and is dating an HIV-positive guy, to his mother's dismay. Shy Kyle
is seeing Jason, and he worries that being accepted to Princeton will
mean the end of their relationship; he also must cope with the anti-gay
gibes of his fellow swim team members. Meanwhile, popular basketball
star Jason has decided to come out to his coach, his teammates, and
the public, and becomes a role model of a different kind, but has his
college scholarship revoked as a result. The opening of the novel summarizes
the main events of the prequel, so that it's not necessary to have read
the first book to become absorbed in the ups and downs of the boys'
lives in this one. Sanchez, a counselor whose mission is promoting tolerance,
illuminates various facets of adolescent gay life through his characters,
and includes detailed information at the back of the book on organizing
a peer group, issues with parents, violence and hate crimes against
gays and lesbians, human rights campaigns, HIV and AIDS, teen sexuality
and suicide, and services on the Internet. But the book is not just
a polemic (and there's no graphic sex, if you're wondering); it's an
involving story of growing up, not just growing up gay, and it deserves
a wide readership. KLIATT Codes: S-Recommended for senior high school
students. 2003, Simon & Schuster, 256p., Ages 15 to 18.
From
School Library Journal:
Gr 10 Up-Nelson Glassman and Kyle Meeks, best friends for many years,
are gay teens at Walt Whitman High School. Kyle becomes romantically
involved with basketball jock Jason Carrillo, while Nelson embarks on
a strained relationship with Jeremy, who has tested positive for HIV.
Jason comes out to his teammates and endures public scrutiny on television,
eventually losing his athletic scholarship. On the homefront, Kyle's
parents desperately want him to attend Princeton, although this would
mean leaving Jason behind, and Nelson's mother insists that he end his
relationship with Jeremy. Throughout these vicissitudes, the young men
provide support for one another as graduation approaches. Sanchez has
written a respectable sequel to the noteworthy Rainbow Boys (S &
S, 2001). He has a definite feel for the thoughts, feelings, and speech
patterns of contemporary high school students, and his characters are
believable, although perhaps not as fully developed as one would like.
The narrative flows smoothly, with plenty of soap-opera dramatics to
keep readers interested and a steamy scene or two to boot. Mature YAs
will identify with the problems and decisions these individuals must
face.-Robert Gray, East Central Regional Library, Cambridge, MN Copyright
2003 Reed Business Information.