The Book Review Club (April 2022)
Welcome to the April 2022 edition of The Book Review Club. You are in for a treat! My little sister, Sheilagh, wrote today's review. That's her picture on the right. Cute, eh? When she was a baby, I used to bring kids home from school to look at her. :) Under her review are links to everyone else's reviews. Enjoy!
EIGHT DAYS by Teresa Toten
(contemp middle grade novel, friendship, family, personal growth)
About the author: Teresa Toten is a Canadian children's book author who writes everything from picture books to middle grade to young adult. She's that kind of talented. Her young adult novel, THE UNLIKELY HERO OF ROOM 13B, won the Governor General's Award.
The premise of EIGHT DAYS: Samantha (Sami) has just found out her mother died suddenly in a drug rehab centre in Chicago. The catch: Sami was told her mother died 10 years ago.
More about EIGHT DAYS: Sami lives in the very diverse Thorncliffe Park area of Toronto. She lives with her recovering alcoholic grandfather (her mother’s father), Carl. Following the shocking news, Sami and Carl, along with Aggie, a motherly neighbour, set out on a life-altering eight-day roadtrip (Toronto to Chicago to Toronto) to recover Sami’s mother’s body.
During the trip, Sami deals with her grief by staying in contact with close friends, Nilofer and Tarek and by being useful. As Sami says, she is not a crier. She's a responsible, helpful person. This is her tried-and-true strategy for getting people to keep her around. Along the way, Sami gains insight into her relationship with her mother and her mother’s reasons for disappearing, as well as her mother’s love for her. She learns new ways to navigate her relationship with Carl, as Carl learns to accept the past and the very different present in which he lives.
Recommendation: Yes, yes, yes! A great read for the 10-14-year-old crowd. The passages about grief ring very true, as does Sami’s fear of abandonment. The author doesn't shirk from difficult topics like drugs, alcohol, death, but addresses them in a wholly appropriate middle-grade way. And, as a Torontonian, I can attest to the authenticity of the Toronto setting with Sami visiting such locations as the Eaton Centre, Shoppers Drug Mart, and Home Hardware. Her entourage follows the Gardiner/ QEW to leave Canada.
ADULT FICTION BOOK REVIEWS
Jenn Jilks: GO TELL THE BEES THAT I AM GONE by Diana Gabaldon (time travel, romance)
Margy Lutz: THE RIDE OF HER LIFE by Elizabeth Letts (biography)
Sheilagh,congratulations to your daughter! I can see why Barrie was eager to read 8 Days. What a compelling premise and quite unusual for MG. I imagine it being a liferaft to a child in similar challenging circumstances.
ReplyDeleteBarrie, thanks for hosting!
It does sound like a good book but pretty serious stuff for 10-14 year olds it sounds like. Thanks for reviewing Sheilagh!
ReplyDeleteSounds like a great book for kids facing death in the family. I was ten when my grandmother died, and I still remember the experience as difficult. Tweeted.
ReplyDeleteLinda McLaughlin
Books for young people are so different these days. When I was teaching it was in kindergarten and first grade so I missed the transition to more timely topics. - Margy
ReplyDeleteThanks for hosting! It's cool reading a book in a familiar setting.
ReplyDeleteI've been meaning to read Teresa Toten. Thanks for this!
ReplyDeleteSami sounds like such a strong main character! Thanks for the review.
ReplyDelete