Crusader

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Overview

Roberta Ritter has been waiting for a knight in shining armor for most of her humdrum life. She's a doormat, a nobody whose mother died a few years back, a smart girl who wastes her afternoons working in a failing arcade in a failing shopping mall. And then a Crusader arrives....Only this Crusader is a virtual reality war game, one that does a booming business at the arcade, despite—or perhaps because of—the controversy over its racism and violence. Roberta's boring life explodes. Onetime friends become bitter enemies, strangers reveal themselves as allies, and Roberta discovers the truth about her mother's death. In uncovering what's real and not just virtually real, Roberta learns to stand up for herself—and, maybe, to become her own crusader.

After a violent virtual-reality game arrives at the mall arcade where she works, fifteen-year-old Roberta finds the courage to search out the person who murdered her mother.

Editorial Reviews

From Barnes & Noble

In his bright debut, Tangerine, author Edward Bloor introduced us to a legally blind kid who, frankly, sees reality a heck of a lot better than anyone around him. Paul Fisher, that soccer-playing wonder with bottle-thick glasses and a heart of gold, leapt into adolescent literature and surprised thousands of us. I, for one, hadn't read such a thirst-quenching story in ages. Paul Fisher became my personal hero. I built a shrine for Tangerine on my bookshelf (yes! no lie!), so dazzled was I by Bloor's thought-provoking tale.

When Crusader fell out of its mailing envelope, I screamed in delight. (I'm not a dork -- bottled up anticipation and longing will do that to anyone.) So in love was I with Edward Bloor's prose that the arrival of Crusader made me weak in the knees -- as if, perhaps, my summertime boyfriend had finally arrived at the resort that our families enjoyed year after year. How had he changed? Would he still love me? What fun would we have together this time around?

So, ummm...maybe you'll understand why I feel hesitant in making broad declarations about what Crusader is or how it reads or if it's as well as Bloor's debut. I'm in shock, I guess. Bloor, my favorite dreamy writer, grew up some since I saw him last, and I'm still figuring out how I feel about his new novel.

While Tangerine explored the idea that a blind kid might actually see more than his sighted friends and family, Crusader tackles the blind spot in the rearview mirror. Fifteen-year-old Roberta is a seasoned journalist, despite her youth. Passively, meticulously, and intelligently recording events at school and at the failing mall where her family owns an arcade, Roberta sees all but feels nothing.

We also learn -- on the very first page -- that she avoids the mirror. "I don't usually look in mirrors because I don't need to. I don't style my hair; I don't use makeup. Most days I couldn't tell you what color clothes I have on. Kristen says that's because I don't have a mother to teach me about such things. Kristin is usually right."

What happened to her mother? Roberta tells everyone that her mother died of a heart attack. We believe her at first because Roberta seems to have everything under control. Soon, though, "truth" unravels into family chaos.

In Crusader, author Bloor and protagonist Roberta sift through layers of reality. They unearth environmental massacres from long ago that matter now; they penetrate political webs and bravely dig out family truths buried long ago. Roberta even learns to look in the mirror. Her journey dazzles.

—Cathy Young

Publishers Weekly
Although the jacket and flap copy play to readers interested in virtual reality, cyber-adventure is only a very small component of this ambitious second novel from the author of the acclaimed Tangerine. Fifteen-year-old Roberta spends her time at a mall, working for her alcoholic Uncle Frank in a virtual reality arcade that features "experiences" for xenophobic violence-mongers: in the war game Crusader, for example, players kill Arab "Infidels." Everything around Roberta is skewed, from the misfits who work at the arcade for no pay (just getting to play the games is enough) to the mall, where the businesses are struggling and the management is corrupt. Home is even stranger. Her mother is dead and her father neglects her, spending all his time with the horrible Suzie, the mall manager. Roberta herself is an oddball, often mistaken for a boy and slow to emerge as a strong character--readers will have to be patient to see her personality take shape. The story is long and packed with subplots, veering from local politics (hate crimes and environmentalism) to teenage suicide, the inner workings of a TV studio and Roberta's quest to uncover the truth about her mother's death. A scheme to expose a dishonest politician is baroque and anticlimactic. Nonetheless, the characters are sharply drawn (racist Hawg is not an entirely bad guy; shallow teen beauty Nina helps out in a pinch), and Roberta is full of surprises. While flawed, this novel is deeper, denser and more complex than most YA fare, and serious readers will appreciate it. Ages 12-up. (Oct.) Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.
From The Critics
Author of Tangerine (Harcourt Brace, 1997/VOYA August 1997), Bloor has produced another thoughtful work. Roberta is a member of an extended dysfunctional family. She works in her uncle's video arcade in a strip mall populated by a weird assortment of employees, among them football crazy Hawg, who works at the arcade for free games; "Betty the Goth," an intimidating food server; and Mrs. Weiss, a gift shop owner and selfappointed grandmother to Roberta. Fifteenyearold Roberta has found her niche in the video arcade, working by night and pursuing her dream of becoming a journalist in her media studies class by day. Willing to address controversy in her writing but not in her life, Roberta does not agree with some of the arcade's policies, but she enforces them. When Asian Americans approach the "Mekong Massacre" game, an outoforder sign is hastily attached to the machine. Because the arcade houses a variety of possibly offensive "experiences," there are policies for almost every minority group. When a vandal attacks an Arab American's business, however, Roberta is forced to confront some latent conflicts in her life, the foremost being the mystery surrounding her mother's murder several years ago. Is the raciallymotivated vandalism at the mall linked to her mother's death? As in Tangerine, this novel provides a fine character study. Readers follow the introverted Roberta through a series of increasingly dramatic events, hoping that one of them will finally wake up her rage. The cast is populated with characters who appear to be either idealistic or dishonorable but who reveal surprising depth as the novel progresses. There is an engaging mystery to keep the reader occupied through390pages, but the main business is to find out how Roberta will finally deal with the shocking evidence concerning her mother's murder and the benign neglect with which her father treats her. This is by no means a fastpaced read, but those willing to invest some time will find a compelling and eloquent story. VOYA CODES: 5Q 3P J S (Hard to imagine it being any better written; Will appeal with pushing; Junior High, defined as grades 7 to 9; Senior High, defined as grades 10 to 12). 1999, Harcourt Brace, Ages 13 to 18, 384p, $17. Reviewer: Alison Kastner

Product Details

  • ISBN-13: 9780152063146
  • Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
  • Publication date: 4/1/2007
  • Edition description: Reissue
  • Pages: 496
  • Sales rank: 683,859
  • Age range: 12 - 17 Years
  • Lexile: 0510L (what's this?)
  • Product dimensions: 5.00 (w) x 7.40 (h) x 1.20 (d)

Meet the Author

EDWARD BLOOR is the author of four acclaimed novels. A former high school teacher, he lives near Orlando, Florida.

Customer Reviews
Average Rating 4.5
( 26 )

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  • Posted October 27, 2008

    more from this reviewer

    Reviewed by Marta Morrison for TeensReadToo.com

    A Crusader is someone who supports a certain cause and a Crusader is also a knight in the 11th-13th centuries who fought to recover the Holy Land from the Muslims. Both of these definitions come into play in this long but wonderful mystery.

    Roberta Ritter is a shy and lonely girl. She is plain but only because she doesn't really care how she looks. Roberta's father owns, along with his brother, a virtual reality arcade in a failing mall in Florida. The family used to have an arcade on the strip, but due to the murder of her mother they sold that franchise and opened this one.

    Roberta doesn't really have a relationship with her father. He is away a lot and so Roberta and her family act as the store owners at the mall where the arcade is located. At the opening of the story, the arcade is getting a new experience in the form of a Crusader. When violence happens at the mall and an Arab is attacked, Roberta becomes a Crusader to foil whoever is doing this and also decides to find out, along the way, who murdered her mother.

    This book is long, 591 pages, but excellent! The characterization of the major players was spot on. I felt like I know Roberta and she is one of my good friends. I really cared about what was going on with every character and the storyline was interesting. It wove in politics and the driving force of the media. There was dysfunction everywhere but there was also true love and caring. I recommend this book wholeheartedly!

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  • Anonymous

    Posted March 9, 2008

    How did this get published?

    I totally agree with a previous review--Crusader is 400+ pages of painfully plodding nothingness. There's a cool idea somewhere in here, although Bloor gets bogged down with uninteresting characters and the tedium of every single nuance of working at a mall. By page 20 I was annoyed by page 50 I was angry by the end of the book I couldn't believe that any teenager would muddle through this.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted June 28, 2006

    Amazing

    This book was, in one word, gripping. There are so many emotions, the characters are complex in each their own way, there is a historical element to learn from. It's just amazing. The twists in the plot are simply brilliant.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted January 18, 2006

    Crusader

    Looking for a good read? A book that¿s really captivating and thrilling? Do you want a book that has you guessing until the very end and at the edge or your seat? Well, then don¿t read Crusader, by Edward Bloor. It¿s a dull book with a weak plot and no excitement. It¿s 590 plus pages or agonizing boringness and I strongly suggest that you don¿t read it. We follow the book through teenager Roberta Ritter¿s eyes. She¿s probably your average mid-teen girl except for the fact that her mother was murdered when Roberta was just a child. Anyway, Roberta works in a failing mall at an uneventful arcade store run by her selfish and thoughtless father and her arrogant and quick-tempered Uncle Frank. Other employees and main characters include: friends Ironman and Hawg, who add the smallest bit of humor to the story, and her cousins Karl, who¿s special-ed, and Kristin, a beauty who Roberta seems jealous of. The book is called Crusader, probably only because there¿s an arcade experience game with that name and maybe also because Roberta likes to watch the Stephen Cross show where he prays a lot. I¿m not really sure why Edward Bloor chose this as a title for the book, but whatever, it¿s his boring book, and how it got published is a real mystery to me! So you¿ve been warned . . . The book goes on and on about the arcade store and every tiny thing they do there, which to me is a real bore. They talk endlessly about how the employees have to de-louse everything after everyone uses the games with head sets. They go on and on about the arcade¿s ¿Asian Policy¿ where they don¿t let the Asian¿s play the Asian games where Koreans shoot the Chinese, because Uncle Frank can¿t tell the difference between them. Or their black people policy, where white people kill black people, etc. It¿s talked about for what seems like all the time in this book. Roberta¿s dad is dating and practically living with the mall¿s supervisor or overseer, Suzie, and so that really puts a wedge between this daughter and father¿s already strained relationship. Roberta doesn¿t like Suzie, and Suzie doesn¿t seem to like Roberta, so it¿s like your average evil-stepmother evil-stepdaughter situation like they always have in movies and books. Roberta comes home to an empty home every night, watches some Stephen Cross and tries to manage her own life. She talks about it all the time. Most of the book is about how Roberta is an aspiring journalist and writes about things she sees and about the failing mall and arcade store. It also talks about Roberta trying to find out what really happened to her mother that awful day that she was murdered at their old Arcade store on the strip and about the people trying to stop her. You don¿t really relate to the characters, you don¿t feel for them, you just don¿t really care what happens to them, and that equals a bad book. There¿s no emotion to the book, no real plot, and no real fun, so I would have to give this book a D, and that¿s even being nice. Doesn¿t it get annoying when I keep repeating things?

    0 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted October 18, 2005

    THIS BOOK ROCKS!!!!!!!!

    This book is sooo awsome. I cried. I laughed. This is just a great book to read. I would recommend this book to anyone.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted July 25, 2004

    Absolutely Wonderful Book

    Crusader is truly one of the best books I have ever picked up--and I read a LOT of books. This is one that captures you right from the start, and keeps you enticed as you read about the world of Roberta, her family and friends, and the mystery of what really happened to her mother. I have read this book twice and am now finishing my third time and it is just as good as it was the first two. Don't be intimidated by the length, it will go by very quickly. Highly recommended!

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  • Anonymous

    Posted January 26, 2004

    THIS IS AN AWESOME BOOK!

    Anyone who gives this book a bad review has got to be crazy! This book is one of the best books ever! I definately think you should read this book.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted November 21, 2003

    Excellent Book

    Read it right away! I loved this book!!!

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  • Anonymous

    Posted January 17, 2004

    1 OF THE BEST BOOKS EVER!

    THIS BOOK IS REALLY GOOD. IN THE START IT WAS OK BUT ONCE YOU GOT IN IT A LITTLE MORE THE BOOK WAS REALLY GOOD AND IT MADE ME WANT TO READ MORE AND MORE. I RATE THIS BOOK 4 STARS BECUASE OF THE START!

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  • Anonymous

    Posted October 3, 2003

    The worst book EVER!!

    If you want to read a REALLY GOOD book that is very interesting, DON'T read this book!! I think that all the other people who wrote a review on this book were not telling the truth. This book had a GOOD plot but it was poorly written. I won't read this book over again. You shouldn't read it either.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted September 8, 2003

    Crusader

    okay, i know this book is really long, but as soon as you get into it, it goes really quick, i'll confess that it's the only book i've read by Edward Bloor, but i really liked it - i even read it twice

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  • Anonymous

    Posted June 7, 2003

    Super Good!

    I love this book. I have read it 3 times and can't wait to read it again! Roberta boldly causes chaos on a live T.V. broadcast to reveal the truth about Ray Lyons. I love how she finds out how and why her mother was murdered, and it is suprising who the murderer was. I never would have guessed! Read this book! You will love it!

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  • Anonymous

    Posted August 20, 2002

    okay

    this book was okay,kind of weird and freaky in some parts...some parts were said like when she ends up not living with her father...the lice part was really gross!

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  • Anonymous

    Posted September 5, 2002

    *!You've got to read this book!*

    This is truly a book with the theme of a teenager growing and finding him/herself. Edward Bloor is a great author. If you liked his book Tangerine, you will like this book.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted July 29, 2002

    This book ROCKS!!!!!!!

    I couldn't put this book down! All I wanted to do was read it and read it and go further into the story. Even though this story is fictional, it seems so real. Roberta is a down-to-earth person whose braveness and strength helps her to realize the truth behind her mother's death. So, booklovers out there, what are you waiting for? Read this book and YOU won't want to put it down!

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  • Anonymous

    Posted April 17, 2002

    The tipy of book you can never put dowen.

    the bookislikone of thoughs books that tell you about some of the people that are out there such as Rabertas Unkel did reassised things to one of the owners in the store. I also belive that the way the auther told you about how the quarterback of the football team killed himself or got on house areast for some thing he never even did then haw he killed him self because he was inassent that like touched me in like so meany ways. I belive that every thing that happend to Raberta was like so tragic finding out that her father sent some guy to go and robbe there owne arcade then her mom got killed trying to stope the man form taking Rabertas callege founed. I also thaought that the old Women giving her all of thoughs things was like the sweetist thing I have ever reade or even hered. I also belive that the Old Woman tell Reaberta all about her giving a baskite of things to the Camp were her Mom and Dad was that was so nice, then Raberta going to where her old famely arcade was and leving a baskit full of all the thing that remided her of her mom such as the book her mom used to read to her and some of her moms old clothing . That was so touching.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted March 4, 2002

    Really Good

    My friend read this, and she read parts of it to me, and I couldn't wait until she was done to read it. I bought my own copy and finished it in two days!!! It was really interesting and keeps you turning to the last page! Roberta is a real character, and Kristin kicks butt!!!!!!

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  • Anonymous

    Posted February 15, 2002

    VERY GOOD

    this book was very good. I am the type of person that hates to read i only read when i have to but this book i read on my own time. When i started this book i couldn't put it down after SSR i kept reading the book and usually got in trouble if you want a good book buy this

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  • Anonymous

    Posted October 18, 2001

    I didn't want to put it down!

    Crusader was a great book. I didn't want to put it down. What Rebbecca sees and hears and feels is really a good insite to how her character is. How others think of her shows many things about her personality and how she lives her complicated life.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted November 16, 2001

    Great Book!

    One must always decide for himself what is the truth and never back down from what they believe in. This is effectively portrayed in the novel Crusader by Edward Bloor, in which Roberta Ritter, a fifteen year old girl, works at a failing arcade in a failing mall. Roberta's father co-owns the arcade with his brother, Roberta's Uncle Frank. Roberta's father fails to acknowledge her, and she cannot keep herself from thinking about her mother's murder seven years ago. Roberta is studying to be a journalist, and she uses her skills to uncover details that have gone unnoticed to discover what really happened. At the same time, Roberta has other things to worry about, such as the hate crimes that are being committed at the mall where she works. A politician is trying to ruin the very same mall and she has to try and save the mall from bankruptcy. She must cope with the deaths of two friends - one elderly and one just a teen. Roberta must look underneath the surface to decide for herself the truth behind on one of the deaths. Bloor writes in a simple and yet easy to understand style. The book deals with many different topics including handling difficult family issues and hate crimes. At the end of it all, though, Roberta manages to show us that the only way to survive is to continue believing in what you know is true and never to give up. ''I'm standing here at the edge of your ditch, and I'm looking at you, with all your money, and all your people, and I'm saying, I will not jump in the ditch like all the others. You will have to shoot me. I will not give up! Do you understand? I will not give up - no matter what you do, I will never, ever give up!'' (pg 358). This book helps to provide a positive message. It showed that you have to find your own way. I really enjoyed reading it. Although it is nearly 400 pages, it will keep you reading until the last page! --

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