This post is actually a difficult one to write. The following is the review I wrote for
The Bully Book for Goodreads:
"This book is disturbing on many levels..... That being
said I think it would be an excellent book to promote class discussion on
bullying. My only qualm was the role of adults in the story. How many times
have we told students tell an adult? Do we listen? Do we do something? Is it
enough? Maybe this a book adults should be reading too."
The book is actually two stories, or journals rather,
blended into one. One story is the
“bully book” or guidebook on to how to be cool and rule the school (while being
a bully). The other story is the
journal of Eric Haskins, the current sixth grade “grunt”, the student that has
been chosen for some unknown reason to be picked on, harassed, tortured, in a
word – bullied – by the entire sixth grade. Eric cannot fathom why he was chosen, or why his
friends have suddenly turned on him and won’t even talk to him. Who make the rules? Why is he the “grunt”? What can he do to save himself? Determined to find out, Eric launches
his own investigation to find the answers and along the way discovers the
existence of the “bully book”.
Unfortunately, the author and location of the book remain a well-guarded
mystery.
As I mentioned in my Goodreads review, the adults depicted
in the story disturb me. Are they
really so dense they don’t see or even sense what’s going on? The “bully book” offers bullies insight
into how to deal with adults that ask questions, it’s chilling testament to how
easy it is to fool people into believing the innocent are at fault. What is even more disturbing is when
Eric finally discovers the true author of the “bully book” and that person’s
reaction. You can feel the pain in
Eric’s reaction:
“Bully Bookers forget………
We live this life forever!”
You’ll have to read the story to find out whom the culprit
is, it’s a shocker.
While I think this is an important book for kids to read,
it’s a book that needs to be discussed as it’s read. Kids need to understand that being a bully is not cool, not
for the “grunt”, the bully, or the kids dragged into the mess. The effects of bullying are not easily
forgotten and in fact stay with people for years, if not forever. While the story is fiction I did
read in the author’s section that he was inspired to write the story from real
life events when he was in sixth grade.
I’m sure there are many of us who can relate….