
The Altruism Trial
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Narrated by:
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Coleman Christian
An adventure book that follows a self-centered, entitled boy as he crash-lands on an island and slowly learns the importance of selflessness and altruism.
Riley Pickering knows he'll be the next Sidney Crosby, so it is expected everyone should cater to him, take care of his needs, and worship the ground he walks on. In addition, he has no patience for school, science, Mme. Capretta, the French language, or following rules.
However, when a science project goes horribly wrong, Riley finds himself in the middle of the Pacific, stranded on an island scrambling to find ways to survive. When he meets two teenagers who are in a similar predicament, he begins to question whether he accidentally landed on the island, or whether he was intentionally sent there.
©2019 Christopher Francis (P)2019 Christopher FrancisListeners also enjoyed...




















Riley learns by "trial and error" to be selfless!
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Listener received this title free
A really fun short story
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ACCEPTABLE FOR ELEMENTARY TEEN AGES AND UP.
STORY IS A SURVIVAL ADVENTURE SHOWING THE ENTITLED YOUTH EVOLVING INTO AN ALTRUIST.
NARRATOR IS GOOD AND EASY TO FOLLOW.
VERY INTERESTING STORY. INTRIGUING.
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This book was tough to start because Riley is a truly unlikeable character. His enormous ego has driven him to become a bully to everyone, including his own parents. New iPhone model comes out that he wants? He'll break his current - perfectly good one - and make his mom buy him the new model. He yells at his younger sister all the time, terrorizing her and making her do things for her. It's quite clear that if something doesn't change, he will end up being a terrible human being. That being said, my heart went out to him in those early days on the island. He had gotten so used to having everything done for him that his ability to survive on his own - to even do the smallest thing himself - was nonexistent. Thankfully, he does learn - albeit very slowly.
That ending, though. It was good and bad at the same time. I'm still not sure how I feel about it. While it certainly showed who Riley had become in a very real way, since Paisley and Duschan didn't go through anything like that (at least, that we know of) we are still left to wonder, and that's the part that I didn't like. I'm hoping there will be a sequel, or a short story, to really finish out the story.
After enjoying reading the book, I also listened to the audiobook that was narrated by Coleman Christian. I enjoyed listening to it even more than reading it; the narrator did a wonderful job with the dialogue and the absolute self-centeredness of Riley in the beginning, as well as showing the character development he goes through on the island.
The narrator makes this story awesome!
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