| A Review of: Peacekeepers by M.J. FishbaneIn Dianne Linden's novel Peacekeepers Nellie Letita Hopkins's mother
is a peacekeeper on assignment in Bosnia. Nellie lives with her
bachelor Uncle Martin and her troubled younger brother Mike and
goes to a school that she affectionately calls, "JAWS."
Linden parallels Nellie's struggle for survive at school with her
mother's experiences in Bosnia. After being threatened by Bonnie,
one of the school bullies, for standing up to Bonnie's boyfriend,
Nellie is afraid to go to school. Nellie feels that her own personal
safely is in jeopardy. She gets help from her friend Sam and his
older brother Ziad, who watch out for her as she exits through the
school's side door.
Linden writes in the first person and makes Nellie instantly
accessible to the reader. For example, when Nellie returns to
school, she sees Sam and asks the reader, "You remember
him?" This approach reinforces the reader's sense of Nellie's
isolation, but it also draws the reader into the middle of the
action.
Nellie's mother's email correspondence is the novel's second
narrative. When Nellie defiantly reads one of the emails marked as
confidential, she discovers that one of the children her mother had
been writing about had stepped on a landmine and died. She is now
confronted with a very different kind of danger.
Unfortunately, Linden becomes slightly preachy and overly reliant
on stereotypes. Bonnie is a bully partly because her parents are
divorced and she craves attention. She is described as wearing a
leather jacket, blue jeans, and sporting spiked hair and a lot of
rings on her lower lip. In contrast, Nellie wears simple blue jeans
and t-shirt. As well, once Nellie begins to open up, her uncle, his
new girlfriend and the school principal support her. The conclusion
becomes clich. In many cases, teens do not feel like they have a
compassionate ear to confide in, and I am not convinced that this
book will provide a good argument for doing so-particularly for
those whose tongue maybe pierced.
|