![]() ![]() I once knew a person who said, "If you start something crummy, it will BE crummy." I don't subscribe to that philosophy. I was disappointed that Clements apparently chose to do so at the beginning of Things Not Seen, but my disapproval turned to admiration as he skillfully turned the relationship in question around (without preaching!!!). It irritates me how the media generally portrays teenagers as rebellious and sarcastic parent-haters. Additionally, the relationship between Bobby and his parents CHANGES. His Te function comes out blatant and untempered at the beginning of the story, but toward the end he has learnt that there is a time and place for consideration of the feelings of others. I digress, but there is a point to emphasizing his type. (Coincidentally, Harry Potter is also and ISFP.) Bobby is in no way the hippie artist that Tumblr uses to define the ISFP. I typed him as an ISFP (FiSeNiTe), albeit a moderately "cold/intellectual" one. He is extremely sarcastic towards the beginning of the story. As a somewhat sheltered ISTJ fourteen-year-old, I was at first put off by Bobby's relatively snarky behavior at the beginning of the novel. ) Anyway, there are several reasons I liked this book.įirst, i loved seeing the quasi-transformation Bobby underwent. Daniel Passer does an excellent job narrating. (I first listened to it as an audiobook, actually. ![]() As you can see from the four stars, I thoroughly enjoyed reading this book. ![]()
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