What Parents Should Know
Every middle schooler should read and discuss this -- and,
fortunately, many of them do.
Common Sense Media Review
This gently mystical, thought-provoking, and enchanting
rumination on conformity is, in some ways, a YA version of
The Little Prince, or a female version of Spinelli's
own award-winning
Maniac Magee. A bittersweet paean to eccentricity and
nonconformity, it is also a scathing commentary on teenagers,
which makes its popularity with them all the more interesting.
Like much of Spinelli's best work, it straddles the line
between reality and fantasy, dwelling in the land of legend and
allegory. Spinelli himself says, in an interview printed in the
back of the book, "the character [is] intended to raise dust in
the corners of credibility, to challenge our routine ways of
seeing ourselves." It does that -- it's hard to imagine young
teens reading this and not having to think hard about their
friends, actions, and the outcasts in their own world.
From the Book:
The girl was picking up her ukulele. And now she was
strumming it. And now she was singing! Strumming away, bobbing
her head and shoulders, and singing, "I'm looking over a
four-leaf clover that I overlooked before." Stone silence all
around. Then came the sound of a single person clapping. I
looked. It was the lunchline cashier.
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