| Number | Call Number | Branch | Status | Volume |
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YA F Donnelly Jennifer |
BT |
In at BT (Boone's Trail) |
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| 2 |
YA F Donnelly Jennifer |
CP |
In at CP (Corporate Parkway) |
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| 3 |
YA F Donnelly Jennifer |
KL |
In at KL (Kathryn Linnemann) |
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| 4 |
YA F Donnelly Jennifer |
MK |
In at MK (Middendorf-Kredell) |
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| 5 |
YA F Donnelly Jennifer |
MY |
In at MY (McClay) |
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| 6 |
YA F Donnelly Jennifer |
SP |
Out: Due May 30 2013 |
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| /*Starred Review*/ Gr. 10-12. Donnelly's first YA novel begins with high drama drawn straight from history: Grace Brown's body is discovered, and her murder, which also inspired Theodore Dreiser's An American Tragedy, is the framework for this ambitious, beautifully written coming-of-age story set in upstate New York in 1906. Sixteen-year-old Mattie Gokey is a waitress at the Glenmore Hotel when Brown is murdered. As she learns Brown's story, her narrative shifts between the goings-on at the hotel and her previous year at home: her toil at the farm; her relationship with her harsh, remote father; her pain at being forbidden to accept a college scholarship. "Plain and bookish," Mattie is thrilled about, but wary of, a handsome neighbor's attentions, and she wonders if she must give up her dream of writing if she marries. In an intelligent, colloquial voice that speaks with a writer's love of language and an observant eye, Mattie details the physical particulars of people's lives as well as deeper issues of race, class, and gender as she strains against family and societal limitations. Donnelly adds a crowd of intriguing, well-drawn secondary characters whose stories help Mattie define her own desires and sense of self. Many teens will connect with Mattie's deep yearning for independence and for stories, like her own, that are frank, messy, complicated, and inspiring. ((Reviewed May 15, 2003)) Copyright 2003 Booklist Reviews | | | |
| Summer sizzlers: terrific teen novels for lazy days Once kids hit the age of 13, they seem to be stuck between different worlds. They're still children, but they wish they were adults. They want to be trusted, but often act impulsively. Their reading, appropriately enough, is just as unpredictable as they are. One minute, they pick books from the bestseller lists, and the next, they nostalgically curl up with Dr. Seuss. Because teens are such a tough audience, we've rounded up some new books that are sure to keep them entertained during those long June afternoons. In her new book Keeper of the Night (Holt, $16.95, 308 pages, ISBN 0805063617), writer Kimberly Willis Holt takes on a sensitive subjecta mother's depression and suicide. Holt addressed the topic of mentally challenged parents in My Louisiana Sky and the treatment of the morbidly obese in When Zachary Beaver Came to Town. Both books have a loyal following and are on summer reading lists across the country. Set in the Guam of her military brat childhood, Holt's newest novel has a shroud of mystery hanging about it, as the child narrator struggles in the months following her mother's suicide. Holt's plain, direct prose belies the deep pain the narrator feels as she tries to understand her mother's life and death. The book opens with the breathtaking sentence, "My mother died praying on her knees." Slowly, almost like the stories that surface during therapy sessions, Isabel's sadness and confusion emerge. The death is terrible enough, but the aftermath threatens to engulf every member of Isabel's family. Tata, her father, sleeps curled on the floor next to his bed. Little sister Olivia's bedwetting and nightmares disrupt her sleep. Older brother Frank uses the long nights to carve words in the wall next to his bed and eventually into his own skin. Isabel's story is both heartbreaking and inspirational, as we watch her sink further into sadness. But, at the breaking point, she and her family are saved by their ability to tell their stories, forgive themselves and begin again. Walter Dean Myers returns this summer with another powerful story of young men growing up in Harlem. In The Dream Bearer (HarperCollins, $15.99, 240 pages, ISBN 006029521X), David Curry meets mysterious Moses Littlejohn, an African-American man with white hair, a stubbly beard and baggy clothes, who professes to be a 303-year-old dream carrier. Moses is looking for someone to pass his dreams to, and, as it turns out, David could use a few. Caught between his violent, unpredictable father, his dedicated mother and Tyrone, his older brother, who is beginning to succumb to the temptations of gang and drug life, David is a gentle boy who listens to the older man's dreams, which soon become a part of him, adding to his understanding of himself, his family and the larger world of Harlem. Myers' latest is a tale that will linger with readers. Jennifer Donnelly's first book for young adults, A Northern Light, is a story as big and bold as the North Woods of New York State where it is set. In the tradition of Gene Stratton Porter, Donnelly delivers a novel filled with the particulars of life at the turn of the century, weaving in details of the local farming and logging cultures, and examining attitudes of racial prejudice and feminism. Narrator Mattie Gokey loves poetry and would like nothing more than to accept the scholarship to Barnard that her teacher, Miss Wilcox, has helped her earn. But her mother recently died of breast cancer, her brother left the family farm after a fight with her dad, and she is desperately needed at home, where her sisters and brothers are too old to be bossed but too young to do farm work. A talented writer with a thirst for books, Mattie tells her own story in a strong but conflicted voice. Her best friend, Weaver Smith, is also hoping to go to college, butas a black boy saving money for Columbiahe faces his own challenges. Their unusual but completely believable friendship sustains Mattie through a difficult year and helps her decide on a course for her life. As the novel progresses, she makes two big promises, and these promises frame the narrative. For readers who will eventually graduate to the sweeping books of John Irving and Barbara Kingsolver, A Northern Light is the perfect stepping-stone. Deft foreshadowing and a real-life mystery keep the story moving along. With Lucas (Chicken House, $16.95, 432 pages, ISBN 0439456983), author Kevin Brooks tells the poignant story of Caitlin McCann and her family, who are also reeling from a death. Caitlin's mother died almost 10 years ago, but the wounds still fester, especially for her father. At his suggestion to "let it all out," to "cry herself a story," Caitlin recounts the events of her 15th summer, from the first time she sees the beautiful outsider, Lucas, to the tragic events on the mudflats. In between, Caitlin spins a dark, suspenseful tale of British life in a small island villagenot the resort town you might imagine, but a small-minded, inbred community characterized by alcohol abuse, gossip, prejudice and evil. When Lucas, a pale boy with a ghostly presence, suddenly appears on the island nothing is the same for Caitlin. She is bewitched by his manner and his kindness. Lucas seems to have a sixth sense about people, and he warns Caitlin about her companions, whom he sees as dangerous, angry and cruel. Turns out he's right about everything. This taut story, though quite a bit longer than most young adult novels, will keep readers in its web, much like Lucas keeps Cait captivated throughout the narrative. As the tale unwinds, we see Lucas become the object of jealousy and suspicion, as mean Jamie Tait and his cohorts plot to rid their island of this "gyppo." Brooks' wonderful novel, told by an unforgettable protagonist, reminds us of the redemptive power of stories. Copyright 2003 BookPage Reviews | | | |
| Should sixteen-year-old Mattie stay in her insular community and become a wife and mother, or should she strike out for the freedom and intellectual stimulation of the big city? A murder helps her make up her mind. Set in upstate New York in 1906, this ambitious historical novel incorporates the same real-life crime--the murder of a pregnant young woman--that inspired Dreiser's [cf2]An American Tragedy[cf1]. Copyright 2003 Horn Book Guide Reviews | | | |
| Sixteen-year-old Mattie Gokey's dilemma is a familiar one, in life and in literature. Should she stay put in the insular community where she has always lived and become a wife and mother, or should she strike out for the freedom and intellectual stimulation of the big city? The twist here is that a murder helps Mattie make up her mind. Set in upstate New York in 1906, this ambitious historical novel incorporates a real-life crime, the widely publicized drowning of a pregnant young woman by the father of her unborn child--the same crime that inspired Dreiser's An American Tragedy. Readers expecting a mystery won't find it in Donnelly's story of a girl caught between feminism and obligation; the murder really just serves as a dramatic, albeit rather heavy-handed, wake-up call. The sweeping first-person narrative shifts back and forth between the day the drowned woman's body is discovered and the months leading up to this gruesome event. The flashback chapters all lead off with a different "word of the day," which Mattie pulls from the dictionary in an attempt to keep her mind active while she's waiting on guests at the Adirondack hotel where she works or pleading with her family's obstinate mule to pull the plow. Pointedly drawn characters reflect the limited choices available to women of that era. Mattie can either marry a local farm boy or go to college, but she can't do both; and, as various individuals around her demonstrate, each scenario has its drawbacks. While it may seem obvious to us twenty-first-century types that Mattie, an avid reader and writer, should go the more modern route, Donnelly manages to make her narrator's conflict feel real. Copyright 2003 Horn Book Magazine Reviews | | | |
| Donnelly combines a mystery with a coming-of-age story about a girl choosing among family obligations, romance, and education. The mystery derives from a true event, the death in 1906 of a young woman in northern New York. In this fictional rendition, 16-year-old farm girl Mattie Gokey is working for the summer at the hotel where the murdered woman has been staying and has given Mattie letters to burn. As the details emerge about the possible murder, Mattie struggles with whether to burn the letters or turn them over to the police. She also wrestles with a deathbed promise to her mother to stay and raise her younger siblings. Mattie, who loves language and excels at creative writing, longs to go to New York City for college, encouraged by a feminist schoolteacher. The story's structure reflects the two promises at issue, with chapters narrated in present tense set at the hotel during the summer and chapters in past tense set during the preceding year when her mother died. The chapters from the past take their headings from new words Mattie is learning from her dictionary, a device that grows a bit tedious, as do the myriad details about the farming life. Issues about racism and women's rights are more deftly woven into the action. While tighter writing would have enhanced the work, this is nevertheless an absorbing story that will appeal strongly to the growing number of historical fiction fans. (Historical fiction. 12+)First printing of 50,000 Copyright Kirkus 2003 Kirkus/BPI Communications.All rights reserved | | | |
| Donnelly's (The Tea Rose) riveting first novel for young adults, like Dreiser's An American Tragedy, was inspired by the Chester Gillette case. Narrated by 16-year-old Mattie, who works at the Glenmore Hotel on Big Moose Lake, the book begins on Thursday, July 12, 1906, the day a search party discovers the drowned body of Grace Brown, a hotel guest. Earlier that day, Grace had given to Mattie a bundle of letters to burn, her correspondence with Gillette. As the mystery behind Grace's death unfolds, flashback chapters fill in details of Mattie's life on her family's farm. Each begins with her "word of the day," which firmly establishes Mattie's love of language and which ties in with the unfolding events. Readers soon discover that her teacher considers Mattie to be a gifted writer and, at the woman's urging, Mattie applies to Barnard College and receives a full scholarship. But as the oldest daughter of a widowed father, Mattie feels an obligation to stay on the farm, and her budding romance with handsome Royal Loomis adds further complications. Each character contributes to the narrator's growing awareness of the narrow possibilities available to women at the turn of the 20th century. Her friendships with Weaver (the only other student with college aspirations, as well as the only African-American boy in their town) and her teacher (who has a secret of her own) are especially well realized. The author's ability to recast the murder mystery as a cautionary tale for Mattie makes the heroine's pending decision about her future the greatest source of suspense. Ages 12-up. (Apr.) Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information. | | | |
| Donnelly weaves the fictional story of 16-year-old Mattie into the events of the Gilette murder case (also the inspiration of Dreiser's An American Tragedy). "The author's ability to recast the murder mystery as a cautionary tale for Mattie makes the heroine's pending decision about her future the greatest source of suspense," said PW's Best Books citation. Ages 14-up. (Sept.) Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information. | | | |
| Gr 8 Up-Mattie Gokey, 16, a talented writer, promised her dying mother that she would always take care of her father and younger siblings. She is stuck on a farm, living in near poverty, with no way of escaping, even though she has been accepted at Barnard College. She promises to marry handsome Royal Loomis even though he doesn't appear to love her. Now, Mattie has promised Grace Brown, a guest at the Adirondack summer resort where she works, to burn two bundles of letters. Then, before she can comply, Grace's body is found in the lake, and the young man who was with her disappears, also presumably drowned. This is a breathtaking tale, complex and often earthy, wrapped around a true story. In 1906, Grace Brown was killed by Chester Gillette because she was poor and pregnant, and he hoped to make his fortune by marrying a rich, society girl. Grace's story weaves its way through Mattie's, staying in the background but providing impetus. The protagonist tells her tale through flashback and time shifts from past to present. Readers feel her fears for her friend Weaver-the first freeborn child in his family-when he is beaten for being black and his college savings are stolen, and enjoy their love of words as they engage in language duels. Finally, they'll experience her awakening when she realizes that she cannot live her life for others. Donnelly's characters ring true to life, and the meticulously described setting forms a vivid backdrop to this finely crafted story. An outstanding choice for historical-fiction fans, particularly those who have read Theodore Dreiser's An American Tragedy.-Lisa Prolman, Greenfield Public Library, MA Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information. | | | |
| Gr 8 Up-Set in the Adirondacks in 1906, this atmospheric story based on a true incident involves a teen trapped by family expectations, a fickle fianc‚, and a murder. A fine blending of characters, setting, and suspense. Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information. | | | |
| Sixteen-year-old Mattie Gokey dreams of going to college and becoming a writer, but a promise to her dying mother to care for the family threatens to keep her chained to their farm forever. Handsome, irresistible Royal, the boy next door, wants to marry Mattie. When she takes a job at a local hotel, she finds out what happens when dreams die-literally-when one afternoon a guest is found dead of an apparent accidental drowning. Before she died, Grace Brown handed a packet of letters to Mattie with instructions to burn them. Curious, Mattie reads them instead and discovers that Grace was pregnant by her wealthy employer. When he accompanied her to the hotel, it was not to be married, but to kill the poor woman who interfered with his plans. Grace's story helps Mattie realize that she must leave for the sake of her own happiness rather than be bound by duty, especially when she also discovers that Royal only wants to marry her to gain farmland. She leaves the letters behind to enable the truth to emerge and boards a train for New York. Switching between Mattie's farm life and her hotel work, this drawn-out tale focuses on dignity and self-worth. Some characters possess these traits; others never will. Mattie's strength, courage, and love of learning mark her as a captivating heroine. Mattie's story is based on real events that occurred in 1906 New York's Adirondack Mountains and became the inspiration for Theodore Dreiser's An American Tragedy.-Pam Carlson. 4Q 3P S Copyright 2003 Voya Reviews | | |
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