Fallen Angels 
I thought that Fallen Angels was one of the best books that ive ever read. It really shows the life in vitnam and what they really had to go threw. I would give it 5 star rating. I would also recomend this book to anyone that likes war books.
In the past four months, I've changed jobs, been forced to move out of my apartment back in with my parents temporarily, and begun the arduous task of DIYing a long neglected house into a livable space without, y'know, electrical wires dangling into the sink and cracked wood-paneled walls. I am finding it hard to have the attention span for any reading above an eighth grade level, and even find myself momentarily overwhelmed by Tess Gerritsen. (Let's meditate on that for a moment. Body Double?

Walter Dean Myers has been writing YA, gritty, urban fiction for a long time and he is very, very good at it. He writes boy books for boys with African-American protagonists. I picked up a special anniversary edition of Fallen Angels last week while I was at the Tattered Cover Bookstore in Denver because Id read Lockdown, his 2010 release, and loved it and the subject matter the Vietnam War interested me. I can still remember sitting around a table in the cafeteria in ninth grade talking to my
As silly as it may seem, this book was just a little too real for me. So, in a way, that would indicate the writing is incredibly effective. However, it was painful to read. I hate war, and the story mostly just depressed me. I can't say anything against the writing, only the content. As an afterthought: I had to read this book for school and I think any time someone told me I HAD to read something my mind immediately decided to not like it. So I should probably read it again by my own choice
Still involved in the Year of YA at Booklist listening to classics on audio. I won't be writing about all of them, but I thought this exceptional--and wonderfully narrated. Published in 1988, it's the story of Richie Perry, 17, whose dreams of college are dashed so he enlists in the army. It's 1968 and the Paris Peace Talks promise an end to the war--the soldiers keep thinking it will end soon. But it doesn't. Perry was supposed to have a desk job because of a knee injury but instead he's at the
War. Many think it is just a game. But to the men and women fighting, it is a living hell. U.S.A., 1960's, Perry is drafted into the U.S. Military, and sent to the front-line in Vietnam. Perry is a young African-American man, working towards getting to college. Perry's family lives in Harlem, whom have a military background. Perry never wanted to go into the military, his mother mainly the reason. The draft got him to go, of course right to the front-line. Facing a new group of friends, Perry
Walter Dean Myers
Paperback | Pages: 320 pages Rating: 4 | 9469 Users | 1253 Reviews

Details Books In Favor Of Fallen Angels
Original Title: | Fallen Angels |
ISBN: | 0590409433 (ISBN13: 9780590409438) |
Edition Language: | English |
Setting: | Vietnam |
Literary Awards: | South Carolina Book Award for Young Adult Book Award (1991), Charlotte Award (1992), Keystone to Reading Book Award (1994), Coretta Scott King Book Award for Author (1989) |
Interpretation Conducive To Books Fallen Angels
An exciting, eye-catching repackage of acclaimed author Walter Dean Myers' bestselling paperbacks, to coincide with the publication of SUNRISE OVER FALLUJA in hardcover. A coming-of-age tale for young adults set in the trenches of the Vietnam War in the late 1960s, this is the story of Perry, a Harlem teenager who volunteers for the service when his dream of attending college falls through. Sent to the front lines, Perry and his platoon come face-to-face with the Vietcong and the real horror of warfare. But violence and death aren't the only hardships. As Perry struggles to find virtue in himself and his comrades, he questions why black troops are given the most dangerous assignments, and why the U.S. is there at all.List Regarding Books Fallen Angels
Title | : | Fallen Angels |
Author | : | Walter Dean Myers |
Book Format | : | Paperback |
Book Edition | : | First Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 320 pages |
Published | : | May 1st 1989 by Scholastic Paperbacks (first published October 7th 1983) |
Categories | : | Historical. Historical Fiction. Young Adult. Fiction. War. Military Fiction |
Rating Regarding Books Fallen Angels
Ratings: 4 From 9469 Users | 1253 ReviewsEvaluate Regarding Books Fallen Angels
Have you ever been faced with the fear of knowing that death could be right around the corner? Everyday is a struggle because you don't know what comes next. This book keeps you on the edge of your seat because the action can heat up at any moment. Richie Perry gets drafted into the middle of all this. Richie is an African-American soldier who was drafted right out of high school. Immediately, he is found making friends with his new squad mates. Not too far into the book, one of his new mates isI thought that Fallen Angels was one of the best books that ive ever read. It really shows the life in vitnam and what they really had to go threw. I would give it 5 star rating. I would also recomend this book to anyone that likes war books.
In the past four months, I've changed jobs, been forced to move out of my apartment back in with my parents temporarily, and begun the arduous task of DIYing a long neglected house into a livable space without, y'know, electrical wires dangling into the sink and cracked wood-paneled walls. I am finding it hard to have the attention span for any reading above an eighth grade level, and even find myself momentarily overwhelmed by Tess Gerritsen. (Let's meditate on that for a moment. Body Double?

Walter Dean Myers has been writing YA, gritty, urban fiction for a long time and he is very, very good at it. He writes boy books for boys with African-American protagonists. I picked up a special anniversary edition of Fallen Angels last week while I was at the Tattered Cover Bookstore in Denver because Id read Lockdown, his 2010 release, and loved it and the subject matter the Vietnam War interested me. I can still remember sitting around a table in the cafeteria in ninth grade talking to my
As silly as it may seem, this book was just a little too real for me. So, in a way, that would indicate the writing is incredibly effective. However, it was painful to read. I hate war, and the story mostly just depressed me. I can't say anything against the writing, only the content. As an afterthought: I had to read this book for school and I think any time someone told me I HAD to read something my mind immediately decided to not like it. So I should probably read it again by my own choice
Still involved in the Year of YA at Booklist listening to classics on audio. I won't be writing about all of them, but I thought this exceptional--and wonderfully narrated. Published in 1988, it's the story of Richie Perry, 17, whose dreams of college are dashed so he enlists in the army. It's 1968 and the Paris Peace Talks promise an end to the war--the soldiers keep thinking it will end soon. But it doesn't. Perry was supposed to have a desk job because of a knee injury but instead he's at the
War. Many think it is just a game. But to the men and women fighting, it is a living hell. U.S.A., 1960's, Perry is drafted into the U.S. Military, and sent to the front-line in Vietnam. Perry is a young African-American man, working towards getting to college. Perry's family lives in Harlem, whom have a military background. Perry never wanted to go into the military, his mother mainly the reason. The draft got him to go, of course right to the front-line. Facing a new group of friends, Perry
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