out of sight, out of time lily gulledge block 2b
TRANSCRIPT
OUT OF SIGHT, OUT OF TIME
Lily GulledgeBlock 2B
OUT OF SIGHT, OUT OF TIME
Written by Ally Carter
Report by Lily Gulledge
Published by Disney-Hyperion in 2012
INTRODUCTION
The novel is set at the Gallagher Academy for Exceptional Young Women,
a girls’ boarding school outside of Roseville, Virginia. The school trains its
students to become spies. In the previous installment of the series, the
main character, Cammie, ran away from the school. She now returns,
having lost her memory of the summer and fall she spent away from the
school. During Out of Sight, Out of Time, she attempts to recover her
memories while dealing with severe head trauma and abandonment by
her friends and family at the school, who feel betrayed by her leaving.
PROTAGONIST
The protagonist of the book is Cammie Morgan, a senior at Gallagher Academy.
She is known as “The Chameleon” due to her success as a pavement artist. Her
mom, Rachel Morgan, is the headmistress at Gallagher, and her dad was declared
missing in action on a mission six years earlier.
I chose Bridgett Mendler to play Cammie.
ANTAGONIST
The antagonist of Carter’s novel is not a character, but an organization. The Circle of Cavan is a terrorist group that, throughout the story, thwarts Cammie’s attempts to regain her memories. They are led by Catherine Goode, a traitorous alumnus of the Gallagher Academy and the mother of Cammie’s boyfriend. The Circle has seen Gallagher girls as great nemeses since the foundation of the Gallagher Academy; their founders were large rivals. Speculation arises from the beginning of the book that the Circle of Cavan tortured Cammie after she ran away.
This is how I imagine Catherine, the leader of the Circle of Cavan.
CONFLICT
Cammie’s main goal is to recover the memories she lost over the
summer. She wants to find out whether or not she was tortured by
the Circle, what happened to her father on his final mission, and
how the conclusion to her summer came to be. To do this, she
travels with other spies to Rome, the last place she can remember
visiting. The Circle of Cavan, however, is dead-set on keeping her
memories forgotten, and they confront her in many, often violent
situations.
MINOR CHARACTERS: STUDENTS
Macey McHenry
Bex Baxter
Liz Sutton
Macey, Bex, and Liz (top) are Cammie’s
roommates and best friends. They aid her in her
quest to remember. Zach (left) is Cammie’s
boyfriend and Gallagher’s only male student. He
also helps her find answers about the summer.
Zach Goode
MINOR CHARACTERS: ADULTS
Rachel Morgan, Cammie’s mom and headmistress, is a retired CIA operative. Cammie always tries to impress her mother, and Rachel always tries to protect Cammie.
Abby Cameron is Rachel’s younger sister. She is a carefree aunt, talented spy, and role model. She goes to Rome with Cammie to recover her memories.
Edward Townsend is an agent from MI6 who takes on the position of CoveOps teacher at Gallagher. While the students dislike his teaching, he proves to be helpful on their mission to Rome.
REVIEWS 1. The first reviewer gave the book five stars, appreciating the darker element brought to the plot by Cammie’s memory loss. S/He also complimented the character development and references to past events. The critic commented lastly on the expression of all characters’ emotions, preferring it over a possible story centrally focused on Cammie and her emotions.
http://www.amazon.com/review/R3KG7O40KXU33J/ref=cm_cr_pr_perm?ie=UTF8&ASIN=1423147944&linkCode=&nodeID=&tag=
2. VOYA gave the novel 4.45 stars. Their review was highly complementary, calling the book perfect. They also said that readers would come out of the story regretless.
http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/10560331-out-of-sight-out-of-time
MY OPINION I thought the book was flawless. Ally Carter captures the mind of a
teenage girl perfectly, and she has a unique writing style that
offers light humor to diffuse the darkest of situations. There are
scenes from the very beginning of the series, scenes that did not
appear to contain foreshadowing or be important at all, that come
back to the center of the plot. She seamlessly weaves together
past and present, dark and light, and the average and the
extraordinary girl to create a riveting and complex young adult
novel. The dramatic and situational irony build up great suspense,
both along the main plot and along smaller side-plots that, while
not necessarily relevant to the book’s progression, are just as
entertaining to the reader.