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Corporate Kid by Neil Shulman, Susan Wrathall

leahegood's review

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5.0

I picked this book at our library used book store thinking it was a different story. After reading a few pages, I didn't expect much. [b:The Corporate Kid|16557071|The Corporate Kid|Neil Shulman|https://d202m5krfqbpi5.cloudfront.net/books/1376426421s/16557071.jpg|22758269] didn't earn a five star rating from beautiful or well polished pros. This story is unique because it's a general market book with a purpose. Instead of the normal twaddle and/or junk of various descriptions that fills young adult stories, this one embodied and taught morality. And it did so without preaching. That's a pretty impressive resume...especially for a general market book.

Fifteen year old Charles Sullivan has never had much. After his father's death, his mother has worked two jobs and struggled to maintain their little family's home in the hood. Their world crumbles yet again when a distracted driver hits her as they leave their church one Sunday morning. That driver, Bill Bradford, is CEO of Hospital of America. The last thing he wants to deal with is bad press over hitting a woman in the hood. He calls his lawyer and tells the man to take care of the situation. He doesn't realize till later that he dropped his wallet at the sight of the accident. He doesn't know that Charles Sullivan picked it up. That wallet, and the boy who picked it up, will bring the two families together in ways they never expected, and will challenge the way they think of each other.

I'm so glad I mistook this book for the one I was actually looking for! Definitely recommend it!