Compulsive Overreader
Along with borderline hypergraffia, my other literary disorder is -- I'm a compulsive overreader. I'd like to say that I'm trying to get it under control, but I'm clearly not. Check out the archives here to find what I'm reading and what I think of it. If you came here directly through blogger --if your page has no yellow frames and no pretty pic of me in the top left corner -- you may want to visit my main site at www.hypergraffiti.com, where you can read this blog and much much more.
About Me
- Name: TrudyJ
I'm Trudy Morgan-Cole, a writer from St. John's, Newfoundland, Canada. My books include "The Violent Friendship of Esther Johnson," "Esther: A Story of Courage," and "Deborah and Barak." I'm also a married mom of two, a teacher in an adult-ed program, and a Christian of the Seventh-day Adventist kind. I blog about writing, reading, parenting, teaching, spirituality, and shiny things that catch my eye.
Tuesday, January 30, 2007
Wednesday, January 24, 2007
Clementine, by Sara Pennypacker, illustrated by Marla Frazee
And now for something completely different -- I review a children's book!
You'd think I'd do this more as we certainly have enough of them in the house and I read enough of them aloud. But rarely am I impressed enough to add a kids' book to my list of reviews. Clementine is a definite exception!
My parents bought this book for Emma, for Christopher's birthday (don't ask) and by the time the kids went to bed that evening, most of the adults in the room had had a look at the book and read a few sentences out loud -- it's just that engaging. This did, however, make me fear that it was going to be one of those kids' books enjoyed mainly by adults -- because you're laughing at the child character, rather than with her.
Clementine could be that kind of book -- the title-character, an overly-imaginative third-grader, could easily be labelled with both ADHD and OCD, and I'm sure her principal would love to get her on an ISSP if she's not already -- but it's not. The humour is as appealing to kids as to adults, though perhaps for different reasons. Emma and Christopher's favourite part was when Clementine suggests to her apartment-building-superintendent father that the pigeon-poop problem on the outside of the building can be solved by putting tiny diapers on all the pigeons. My favourite part was when Clementine's baby brother asks to "Go for a wok?" and Clementine puts him in the wok and spins him around the kitchen floor. Really, there's something for everyone here.
Emma loved having the book read aloud, and Christopher, while disdainfully insisting that "Clementine's weird" (presumably because she's a girl) hesitantly asked if we'd come into his room to read the last couple of chapters. Clementine's perspective on the world is fresh, funny, and absolutely believable, and her family is adorable.
This is the first I've heard of Sara Pennypacker as an author, but illustrator Marla Frazee is already popular in our house, having illustrated The Seven Silly Eaters, which is one of Emma's favourite books, and On the Morn of Mayfest, which we also enjoyed. I notice that Amazon has a listing for a sequel called The Talented Clementine, scheduled for release in April 2007, and I can definitely see this series holding a permanent spot on our bookshelves.
The Memory Keeper's Daughter, by Kim Edwards
This novel begins with a fascinating premise, very loosely based on a real-life incident. On a winter night in 1964, a young doctor delivers his own twins. Discovering that one of them has Down Syndrome, he gives her to his nurse to secretly take to an institution -- and tells his wife that their baby daughter has died. Instead of carrying out his instructions, the nurse leaves town with the baby girl and raises her as her own daughter in another city.
I don't know how anyone could not want to read on and find out how this story turns out, particularly when it's as well-written as this. I raced through this book in twenty-four hours, picking it up whenever I got a spare moment. The story tells about the parallel but separate lives of the two families -- Dr. David Henry, his wife Nora, and their son Paul; Caroline Gill and her daughter Phoebe. As David and Nora's marriage flounders and Nora grieves for the daughter she believes dead, Caroline struggles to give Phoebe a full life in a world that has little understanding of or tolerance for her disability.
The novel covers thirty years in the lives of these characters and never becomes dull or tiresome, though in a couple of places it stretches credibility a little. I found all four of the viewpoint characters (David, Nora, Paul and Caroline) believable and sympathetic; I didn't always agree with their choices but always understood why they made them.
The writing is good, polished without drawing attention to itself, but there are places where Edwards over-writes and tells us things she has already shown. I got tired of being told, in so many words, that David was keeping a terrible secret that had affected everyone's lives -- we get that, it's clear from the beginning, we don't need to be told. Despite this tendency to over-narrate important moments, this is essentially a well-written page-turner that made me care about its characters and dealt sensitively with the Big Issues: grief and loss, Down Syndrome, and the progress of a marriage.