FINISHED:
Haydu, Corey Ann. (2017). The Someday Suitcase. New York: Katherine Tegen/HarperCollins.
[Floridian fifth graders Clover and Danny are completely in
tune, super-best friends, so when Danny becomes mysteriously ill, causing him
to be unable to hang out and to miss a bunch of school, Clover starts to
question who she is without her symbiotic other. For her school science fair Clover decides
that her project will be on Danny and an attempt to figure out what is ailing
him, and then hatches a plan to get Danny to a new-agey clinic in Vermont that treated
a classmate’s mother. Haydu’s follow up
to the exceptional Rules for Stealing Stars (HarperCollins, 2015) similarly
doesn’t pull punches when it comes to heavy emotional situations but, rather,
fully embraces them with a visceral, kick-in-the-gut reality, and her continual
integration of science into the narrative – what it is, and what it means to be
a scientist – keeps the reader questioning what they know. Could Clover’s presence alone be helping
Danny to feel better? Clover’s
never-waning devotion to her best friend is fully explored, with Clover even beginning
to feel guilty for making a couple of new friends, and a depiction of a home
life where she has to deal with a little brother who is on the autism spectrum
and a truck driving father whom is frequently away add further character depth. With a hint of magical realism, this is an
examination of the line between where science ends and magic begins, positing
that magic may just be science that we don’t yet understand.]
STARTED:
Cole, Henry. (2017). Bayberry Island [Brambleheart #2]. New York: Katherine Tegen/HarperCollins.
[Liked the first one, thought that I'd review the second...]
*
Thursday, August 31, 2017
Labels:
boy,
death,
Eric favorite,
family,
friendship,
girl,
illness,
magic,
magical realism,
science
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment