TITLE SendAUTHOR Patty Blount
PUBLICATION August 1, 2012
READ August 7 - 9, 2012
To keep his secrets, all he has to do is listen to the voice in his head and just walk away...
On his first day at his new high school, Dan stops a bully from beating up a kid half his size. He didn't want to get involved. All he wants out of his senior year is to fly under the radar. But Dan knows what it's like to be terrorized by a bully-he used to be one. Now the whole school thinks he's some kind of hero, except Julie Murphy, the prettiest girl on campus. She looks at him like she knows he has a secret. Like she knows his name isn't really Daniel.
A copy was provided by the publisher as part of the It Only Takes One Click blog tour.
Dan, our fantastic male protagonist, is a shell of a boy. He has been through so much and one bad choice has changed his life drastically. I really wanted to give him a hug throughout. He had come to hate who he was and he was so determined that he needed to suffer at every possible opportunity. Dan becomes a hero of sorts for a boy being bullied at his school, Brandon, and does everything he can to help him through a tough time. The fluidity with which the growth of Dan is written and the fall into darkness that Brandon goes on is amazing. I felt both of the progressions were conveyed in a very realistic way and the events that lead to them well thought out.
There is, of course, a love story here but it takes a back seat and it is also well paced and has its own hint of mystery. Julie was a character that I had a really hard time reading throughout, at times I thought she was a fun, outgoing character but she would turn off at the snap of a finger. All of these elements and the realistic approach Blount takes to an issue that is at the forefront of our society makes this an important story.
There is so much going on in this tale and it all weaves together in an intricate way to make a truly memorable read. Send tackles a tough issue in a touching way and I definitely recommend giving it a read.
The Consequences of Technology
In 2004, my son had a growth spurt. He hit five foot nine, started shaving, endured some vicious acne and all the other curses of puberty and so, became the favorite target of a group of little boys who thought it was great fun to tear down the giant. This torment had gone on for months before I ever learned about it.
I didn’t learn about it until my son told me he no longer wanted to live.
He was in sixth grade. Today, he’s in college and doing well, but I will tell you he bears deep scars from his ordeal.
Let’s skip to 2009: a new executive at my day job directed us to start incorporating social media into our work. I knew nothing about networks like Facebook and Twitter and had a lot of homework to do before I could figure out how to meet his directive. The more work I did, the more grateful I became that none of these networks were around back in 2004.
If they had been, I’m sure I would have lost my son.
Social networks are great tools. They give a voice to anyone with an internet connection, they allow us to remain connected to folks we’d otherwise have lost touch with, and they expose us to news before the networks can report it. Here’s the irony: the things that make social networks so great are also the very things that make them so dangerous. The problem with everyone having a voice is that we can’t readily determine which voices are qualified to support the opinions being stated and which are just hot air. Remaining connected can easily become stalking. And, ‘news’ may be nothing more than rumor. (Bon Jovi did not die in December of 2011.)
I have two more bullet points for the Danger list: First, many of us are more likely to say something snarky online than directly to someone’s face. Psychologist John Suler calls this the Online Disinhibition Effect and what’s really scary is most of us aren’t even aware we’re caught up in it. According to Suler, the internet makes us all anonymous and invisible and because there’s no online authority, exaggerates our own sense of self.
In other words – it’s a power trip and power is pretty much the bully’s objective, isn’t it?
Second, there is the immediacy of it and I want to stress that this is NOT a trap limited only to teens. Adults are just as likely to lose their tempers and take inappropriate action based on anger as teens. This is actually why I chose SEND as the title of my book – because the Send key is RIGHT THERE at the top of the screen, just itching to be clicked before you’ve carefully crafted the message you want to express.
I think it’s important for all of us to remember two things: first, technology is not a toy and second, children are not short adults, which means that is exactly how they’ll treat technology. Social sites, smart phones and the internet have the potential for positive and negative results. I don’t know how children can distinguish the good from the bad without guidance from adults.
How old were your children when you bought them a cell phone? Are they on Facebook or Twitter? Do you know who they’re talking to? Better question – do you know who’s talking to them?
-Patty Blount
I'm so excited to be able to give away a copy of Send to one reader who is a resident of the United States or Canada. Simply fill out the Rafflecopter below!



One of my really good friends was bullied in school and it was so heartbreaking. I would always stand up for him, but the kids would still keep doing it. After about 2 years it finally stopped, but he will be scarred for life from it.
ReplyDeleteGreat review, as always, love. I'm reading Send right now, and so far, I absolutely agree with your assessment. I worry sometimes about my nephews and niece, who are in school, and of course, online. Kids can be so cruel, and the internet seems to make them even more so.
ReplyDeleteI hope books like Send can be a wake-up call for the bullies of the world and a message of hope to the victims.
Hi, everyone - thanks so much for reading and reviewing SEND! I really hope kids will think before they click send after they read it.
ReplyDeleteI had experience with it and it wasn't an easy journey but definitely made me a stronger person now. Sometimes we can be really cruel to each without even thinking to. There are countless ways to hurt someone, emotionall and physically, but there also many ways to counter it. I hope friends and bystanders will step up to plate whenever they see wrongdoings.
ReplyDeleteI don't have any children but I do have a neice who was picked on last year by another student because of her weight and it was very upsetting.
ReplyDeleteI was actually bullied in middle school by a girl. I didn't know that I was being bullied at the time. I would never say anything to her I would just ignore her but then later on in high school she started being nice to me
ReplyDeleteI love the idea of this novel. As a...victim of bullying during the facebook and myspace age this person's guest post really spoke to me. Sometimes all it takes is a comment or a string of them to destroy every bit of self esteem you've ever had. People need to be more aware of that.
ReplyDeleteI love this guest post so hard!!!
ReplyDeleteAnd really looking forward to reading this one. Cyber bullying is something that is often overlooked and it happens SO much, and not just to teenagers. Look at the drama lately for example. I'm sure it was even more poignant for you who could very well relate to it. when I was in High school Facebook didn't exist yet (so weird!) and no one was online, like, at all, so I was never put in that situation but since blogging I've gotten my share of mean comments and mild bullying. I also like that the romance doesn't take over the plot which happens so often and ruins it in a lot of cases. Why do I talk so much?
I was bullied in school and nothing was done about it. Mostly it was on the bus ride home. My junior and senior year of high school my mom dropped me off and picked me up from school so I wouldn't have to deal with the bullying anymore.
ReplyDeleteI was bullied in junior high and high school (no internet back then). It was terrible and really affects you. The bullies think they don't like you but they don't even know you. On two separate occasions a few years later I saw a kid who had teased me and they were nice, but I still didn't trust them. It's hard to forgive them b/c they should've known better in the first place not to bully someone and make them miserable.
ReplyDeleteTeachers don't understand. They say things like "they only tease you because you're smart" which doesn't make sense since some of the kids who teased me were Honors students, too. Another teacher told me that you attract more flies with honey than vinegar. I've disliked that expression ever since; it made me think that she wanted me to be nice to idiots who teased me or blamed me for it.
It's terrible when you get in trouble because someone's bothering you. That happened once. A kid was messing with my folder in class and I tried to get him to stop. The teacher sent us to the principal's office. The kid causing the trouble tried to tell me what I should say to the principal. I'm sure I didn't listen to him, but I got detention anyway (the only time I ever had it), and I think that's stupid when I was only trying to protect my property and myself and get him to stop bothering me.
I think that bullying's something that affects most, if not all, people. I have to say that although I haven't been bullied through name-calling and the such, I got the opposite. As a kid, being ignored was possibly the biggest punishment ever, like being the slightly odd kid was wrong. But hey, I made it through, and in turn it made me the much more resilient person I am now.
ReplyDeletei was bullied but not the as extreme as in the us. i received my copy yesterday . i can't wait to read it
ReplyDeleteNot many in life hasn't been bullied. I was a poor small farm girl and riding the bus each day was pure torture. It was cruel comments, pulling my hair, making fun of my clothes, shoving me in lines and then avoiding me at lunch or while choosing teams. Children and adults both can be very cruel.
ReplyDeleteI have looked at this book a few times wanting to read it, thanks for the chance to win it!
ReplyDeleteI volunteer for a girls group, girls in grades 2 & 3, and unfortunately even in our small group of 25 girls I do see bulling. Most of the time the girls don't really understand how hurtful they are being to someone else and are only looking out for themselves, trying to make others laugh and therefore acceptance. It hurts my heart every time for both the bully and the bullied that they have to either deal with someone treating them poorly or thinking that picking on someone else is the way to win the apporval of their peers. :(
Hi i have not read this book but have read some reviews. I wouls like for my grandaughter to read this as well because last year she was bullied by a girl in the 8th grade. She was pick on and tripped on the bus her hair was pulled and gum was put in it on the bus. She had a variety of other things happen at school but they got taken care of. She is in high school this year and i fear she is headed for alot more cause now she has braces. Thanks Joannies
ReplyDelete