Panic by Sharon Draper

Panic by Sharon Draper

Would the enticements of fame and fortune tempt you to ignore all your mother’s warnings and leave a public place with a perfect stranger? Could you love somebody enough to ignore all the warnings signs of abuse and allow yourself to be manipulated into a compromising situation that later may destroy your reputation?

Sharon M. Draper’s latest novel, Panic, explores the answers to these two questions through the intertwined lives of several teens who work and play together as members of the same dance studio. The first plot line follows the experiences of Diamond, whose disappointment over not getting the lead part of Wendy in the studio’s production of Peter Pan causes her to overlook the peril of going off with a stranger who claims he’s a movie producer and that she has a shot at a part in a movie production of Peter Pan. The second plot line follows the experiences of Layla, whose jealous boyfriend wants her to quit dance so she has more time for him and who lures her into posing partially nude in front of the camera. Both Diamond and Layla find their reputations (and lives) severely damaged by their willingness to trust people who haven’t earned it. Both discover, though from different perspectives, the ways that pride can be your downfall.

Though Draper takes us into potentially bleak territory, the worst of what happens occurs mostly off-stage. She is careful not to take teen readers too far into the darkness though it is obviously there. The most compelling aspect of the story is not Diamond’s fear and abduction, or even Layla’s attempts to deal with the increasing violence of a beloved boyfriend (though both are interesting and keep readers on the edge of their seats). Rather, the most compelling aspect of the story are the after effects faced by both Diamond and Layla. Despite the difference in their situations, their shame is made public via the internet, and both girls will forever have to deal with the consequences, especially since, as talented dancers, they will remain in the public’s eye.

 

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