29 days of book love

I am reading this right now for book club. It is depressing as hell but also strangely uplifting. 

Katherine Boo has done extensive research to write such a first hand account of life in India. It’s written like fiction, a story woven from reality. I am smell sensitive and I can faintly get a whiff now and then as I read of the sewage lake and the trash. It’s extraordinarily real.
Today when I’m feeling blue about my own life it serves as a major reminder of what we take for granted in these United States of Americah. If you are interested in the greater world around us pick this book up. 

M. Sindy Felin's Touching Snow


I purchased this book for my school library after reading about it on some random blog (wishing now I had kept track of just which blog). Even though the content is more middle school I thought I had fifth graders whowould handle the subject matter.

What is the subject matter your asking? Child abuse and the plight of immigrant families are the overriding themes of this well-written novel. The author does a brilliant job of writing in the voice of an eighth-grade young girl.

  • The book begins in a startling way, with Karina telling us what it feels like to walk the halls of her school after killing her step-father. I think everyone should read this book; just as I believe all humans should work in the service industry…it is important to know how the world works; really works and this book describes how child abuse works in many families!! Karina has two sisters; Enid and Delta and all three suffer beatings from their large Haitian step-father. Here the three sisters discuss how they are going to save each other as adults:

“We should all make a pact and swear that when we get married, we’ll never let our husbands treat our kids like Daddy does. We should prick our fingers and press them together and become blood sisters and swear.” (Karina says)
“We’re already sisters, Katu,” said Enid.
“Oh, yeah, I know,” I said. “but we should swear anyway.”
“How would we ever stop someone like Daddy?” Delta asked.
I shrugged. “It’s just an idea.”…
…”I think that’s a very good idea, Katu.” whispered Enid. It was all the encouragement I needed. “All you’d have to do is call for help. We could have a signal, like…like…”
“Like the eagle has landed,” said Enid.
“No!” yelled Delta as she jumped up suddenly and began twirling around and flapping her arms like a bird. “Your guardian angel has landed!”
“Yeah, something like that,” I continued.

The girls are just looking for someone to save them; saving themselves has proven to difficult. The pattern is that one girl gets a “beat-up” from Daddy and then they are forced to lie about it to any authority figure, with the girls taking the blame. It isn’t like anybody has a gun to their head to cover for “Daddy” but they know the routine. Mama needs “the Daddy” to be there in the house to pay the bills and even though, the mother is upset with the severity of the beatings, she feels the kids need his discipline to stay in line. Daddy works as a taxi driver and Mama works at a factory; often overtime to make ends meet. In any kind of abuse there is always an unwritten code to not get the offending parent in trouble and this family has the system down.

Here is another quote describing this vicious circle:

“Don’t worry, Mrs. Gaston,” said Mr. Levinson as her reached over and patted her arm. “We will do everything we can to get your family back together.”
I could not believe what I was hearing. Yeah, I knew what I had just told Father Sanon and Mr. Levinson. (the lie that she beat her sister, Enid) But if they couldn’t tell I was lying, then they were major retards. Why did I keep thinking some adult somewhere was finally going to start acting like one? Why did I think that Aunt Merlude would know what else to do when she found Enid half dead besides collapsing into a babbling heap of drool? Why did I think Uncle Jude would drive us all to the police station and rat out his brother instead of dunking Enid in a scalding salt bath, then letting the Daddy crash at his apartment? Why did I think that Mr. Levinson would listen to me tell him how I’d beaten Enid so badly she was still limping this many weeks later, then nod his head and pat my arm and say “Bullshit, Karina“?

Yes, there is a small amount of swearing, some kissing between Karina and a girlfriend, which will probably freak some people out. It fits with the story though and as the reader, I came away cheering for Karina, Delta and Enid for making their lives work amidst all the chaos. This is a wonderfully well-written tale about a harsh topic that had me racing to the end to see if any guardian angels show up to help.

Check out The Brown Bookshelf review.

What I have read this week…


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is two fabulous historical fiction books for middle grade and YA. I read first A thousand Never Evers by Shana Burg, which was great, great, great and I am thinking of ordering it for my elementary library because it is very readable and has such a strong female main character. I think I have a few higher level readers that would enjoy it as well as a great read-aloud for teachers. The story is set in the South and the author uses Medgar Evers’ and Emmitt Till’s death as well as the Birmingham church bombing, killing 4 young Sunday School attendee’s as a backdrop. I have been fascinated with this part of our American history for years and love Mildred D. Taylor’s books for their honest portrayal and great characters. Addie Ann reminded me a great deal of Cassie, thoughful, wanting to make the right choices but not always knowing which path to take. I highly recommend this book to anyone who would like to get caught up in an era when we, as a country, were not at our best, but that many used as a time to stand up and demand justice everywhere including their own backyards as this story proves.
Chains by Laurie Halse Andersen is the second historical fiction (I have about 3 chapters left) and I am riveted to the tale of Isabel and her sister, Ruth. My husband can attest that as I read this story I am disgusted with how this slave at this time in history (backdrop is the American Revolution) is treated. You really get, as a reader, that deep understanding of slaves mattering no more than furniture that works…like a vacuum cleaner, (well could be furniture it some homes?otherwise known as an appliance:)). There is such intensity to this book. I continue to be shocked along Isabel’s journey at what befalls this brave young heroine. It always makes me incredibly sad, even when I read in a historical picture book to students nonetheless, when I read about families ripped apart and sold away from each other. Teary-eyes during story time is not always a bad thing for students to witness. As a mama I can’t imagine anything worse than having my sweet children sold from me!!! Henry’s Freedom Box describes this heart-wrenching practice by slave owners to further keep slaves feeling less than human. In Chains Isabel’s sister Ruth suffers from perhaps epilepsy, which of course causes trauma in the household and Isabel discovers she cannot, no matter how hard she tries, protect her sister. Isabel is a great character, with tough choices to make, constantly thinking of how to get out of her place in life. She expects to work hard but it is her ability to see herself as human and thus unable to make her own choices that drive this character forward to the hope of freedom. It seems so much has been taken away from Isabel yet her soul stays strong.