Into the River
Into the River
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Publisher's Hardcover ©2016--
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Polis Books
Annotation: Wanting more than the Maori customs and rituals provide Te Arepa believes his prayers are answered when he is awarded a scholarship to a boarding school across the country.
 
Reviews: 5
Catalog Number: #131440
Format: Publisher's Hardcover
Publisher: Polis Books
Copyright Date: 2016
Edition Date: 2016 Release Date: 06/14/16
Pages: 270 pages
ISBN: 1-943818-19-3
ISBN 13: 978-1-943818-19-8
Dewey: Fic
LCCN: 2015956269
Dimensions: 23 cm.
Language: English
Reviews:
ALA Booklist (Sun May 01 00:00:00 CDT 2016)

Te Arepa grew up in a small New Zealand village, enraptured by tales of his Maori ancestors. When he gets a scholarship to attend tony Barwell's, a prestigious all-boys boarding school, he is looking forward to the academic glory, but the hurdles, especially racism, are significant. He is ultimately a success, but he begins to feel burdened by his Maori identity and bored by village life. By the novel's end, Te Arepa seems almost indistinguishable from his white peers, and though there's a hint he has become disenchanted by Barwell's, his future is unclear. Though it's unfortunate that most of the girls in Dawe's novel are fairly one-dimensional, Te Arepa, who cycles through a believable variety of identities and struggles, is beautifully vivid. The compassionate depiction of the teen's choices, both good and bad, as well as the candid portrayal of life at an all-boys school, packed as it is with drugs, drinking, sex, and violent bullying, will give this significant appeal for fans of character-driven novels where the conclusions aren't very rosy, let alone clearly definitive.

Kirkus Reviews

A Maori teen's brutal experiences at boarding school provide an object lesson in how systems of power perpetuate themselves. Te Arepa Santos is a rural boy, keen on hunting eels in a nearby river and fascinated by his grandfather Ra's tales of how their intrepid ancestor Diego Santos assimilated into their tribe and saved them from annihilation by a rival tribe. When he wins a merit scholarship to prestigious Barwell's Collegiate in Auckland, Te Arepa discovers that he is the only Maori student enrolled. He faces class snobbery and racism from every quarter and finds himself trying to erase his ethnic identity in his attempts to adjust to Barwell's unyieldingly patrician, casually violent culture. Taking the nickname Devon, in tribute to the ship that brought Diego to New Zealand from Spain, is the first of many self-effacing tactical decisions he makes that eventually cost him dearly. Every relationship is transactional and every experience, a competition for a better position in the school's hierarchy. This award-winning book has also been the object of censorship attempts in New Zealand due to its frank, often grim representations of violence, drug use, and fumbling teen sex. Though the prose is often plodding and the plotting littered with heavy exposition, Te Arepa/Devon is a deeply compelling character. The frequent Maori references are defined in footnotes. Readers will either see themselves in Devon and his story or will reconsider their own roles in their schools' social structures. (Fiction. 14-18)

Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)

In a book briefly banned in the author-s native New Zealand, Dawe revisits a character from his novel Thunder Road, this time as an adolescent. Te Arepa is a 13-year-old from Whareiti, a Maori village. Te Arepa sees himself in his adventuring ancestor, Diego Santos, whose legend permeates the village. After being accepted to Barwell-s Collegiate, a posh boarding school in Auckland, Te Arepa becomes Devon, disguising his name and Maori heritage to escape torment by senior boys. With friends Mitch and Steph, Devon experiences a world ripe with possibilities and the pressures of academic excellence. But his relationship with Steph brings its own set of problems in the form of stealing, drugs, and sex, including exploitation at the hands of a teacher. Dawe explores the inner sanctum of boarding schools and bullies in the morally confused Devon, who gravitates to choices that derail his life. While the descriptive scenes feel prolonged and the female characters are one-dimensional, Dawe-s novel cleverly leaves the ending unresolved, emphasizing the complications of culture, loyalty, and consequences when -there is freedom and then there is everything else.- Ages 13-up. (June)

School Library Journal (Sun May 01 00:00:00 CDT 2016)

Gr 8 Up-Te Arepa Santos is a 13-year-old Maori boy living in a remote rural town in New Zealand. Life is slow but rich with family and friends. He can easily spend a day catching eels with his friends, or nights with his grandfather telling stories of the ancestors he is named after. When the teen wins a scholarship to a prestigious Auckland boarding school, he goes with expectations from his family. The school resembles an English private schoolTe Arepa is expected to study Latin and to put up with bullying by senior pupils, which is traditional within the setting. His Maori language and culture are not valued. As all the boys are given nicknames, Te Arepa becomes Devon, changing not only in name but in nature as he struggles to fit in. Devon's best friend is Steph, who has his own identity issues. Familiar with boarding schools, Steph manipulates teachers and other students to get what he wants. This work has won multiple awards in New Zealand and has been at the center of much controversy there. Aimed at older teens, the novel contains very strong language, underage sex, sexual relations between a student and a teacher, drug use, and violence. However, these elements are not gratuitous but are integral to the narrative, which the author based on his experiences as an educator in this kind of setting. While the story is firmly rooted in New Zealand, the themes are universal to all teens.

Voice of Youth Advocates

Thirteen-year-old Mauri Te Arepa sorts out the hopes and taboos of his tribe's myths and legends, as well as the mores and prejudices of a wealthy white world, to find his personal truth. He accepts a scholarship at an upper-class boys' school that condones sadistic and dehumanizing hazing. His dorm mates offer choices for survival. Stephen, a gifted actor in life and on stage, brags that he can manipulate his way to success with drugs and sex. Mitch, a tough street kid with a passion for cars, uses his fists. Wade, a "mama's boy" from a successful family farm, goes along with the system. Although Te Arepa is most comfortable in Mitch's world, he allows the wily Stephen to pull him into a web of perversion, abuse, and dishonesty. Te Arepa discovers that each person, regardless of culture or situation, must deal with the destructive consequences of his own bad choices.In New Zealand, an individual faces a $3,000 fine, and a company faces a $10,000 fine, for distributing or displaying Into the River. National reaction to that ban has been significant. Dawe combines today's too-common horrific headline news with native legend and wisdom to produce a tough and plausible culture-clash, coming-of-age story. Seeming to give up name, culture, and family, Te Arepa proves to be brave enough to claim freedom regardless of price. This is a crossover, hard-hitting read appropriate for life-experienced and older teens as well as adults.Lucy Schall.

Reviewing Agencies: - Find Other Reviewed Titles
ALA Booklist (Sun May 01 00:00:00 CDT 2016)
Kirkus Reviews
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
School Library Journal (Sun May 01 00:00:00 CDT 2016)
Voice of Youth Advocates
Reading Level: 7.0
Interest Level: 6-8

Winner of the Margaret Mahy Award "Some rivers should not be swum in. Some rivers hold secrets that can never be told." Te Arepa is an adventurous Maori boy, bound to the history, customs and rituals of his people. Yet when he comes upon a giant eel while fishing, he is convinced the creature is a taniwha, or water demon, and follows it. Yet what Te Arepa finds in the river is far different, far more sinister. And it will change his life forever. Te Arepa has always been curious about experiencing life beyond his tribe. His wishes seem granted when he is awarded a scholarship at a prestigious boarding school, far away from the Maori. Leaving behind his family and their traditions, Te Arepa sets out to discover a strange new world with customs of its own...as well as new enemies. When he arrives at school, Te Arepa finds the freedom and everything it offers intoxicating. But to fit in, he realizes that he must shed his identity, culture, and even his name. And he comes to realize that what the water demon showed him in the darkness of the river that day changed him, and that freedom comes with a heavy price.


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