Today’s recommendation falls into category #9, A book written by or about someone on the autism spectrum. Title: RAIN REIGN Written by: Ann M. Martin Published by: Feiwel and Friends, October, 2014 Themes/Topics: Aspergers, homonyms, loss, rules Suitable for ages: 7-12 Awards: Schneider Family Book … Continue reading
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Blog: Miss Marple's Musings (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: children's books, aspergers, autism spectrum, RAIN REIGN, Diversity Reading Challenge 2015, 2015 Diversity Reading Challenge, Ann M Martin, Charlotte Huck Book Award (2015), middle grade reads, Schneider Family Book Award for Middle School (2015), Add a tag
Blog: Kids Lit (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Elementary School, grief, autism, Aspergers, Middle School, Add a tag
Mockingbird by Kathryn Erskine
Released April 15, 2010.
In this small novel, Erskine has combined the tragedy of a school shooting with the unique voice of Asperger’s syndrome. Caitlin’s older brother, Devon, has been killed in a school shooting along with others. As Caitlin struggles to understand the emotions around her and the feelings she herself has, she has to do it for the first time without her brother helping her. She tries to do it without flapping her hands, without burying herself in her father’s sweater, but she does retreat to her safe places like under the dresser in Devon’s room. Her world is black and white, just like her award-winning drawings, color only confuses things. But as the days go by, Caitlin begins to connect with other people in new ways and perhaps through her own literal understanding of things she just might find closure and help others find it too.
I don’t feel that I can encapsulate this book in a paragraph. It is so much larger than I can describe, so much more profound and uplifting. Erskine has taken two ideas that seem very divergent and created something amazing from them. The two become more vital and important joined into a single book than they would have been separately. Caitlin’s own grief is explored in such a literal and detached way that it becomes even more painful to witness. Her inability to speak her emotions hands them over to the reader to feel for her. We all become a part of her syndrome and feel it to our bones.
Through the lens of Caitlin readers also get to witness the grief of others. Get to wince when Caitlin puts something too bluntly. Cry when she is unable to understand. Rejoice when connection is made, no matter how small. Through Caitlin we get to see difference as a sliding scale that we too fit on somewhere.
This is a book about one family, one tragedy, one girl, but it reaches far beyond that. It is a book about surviving, about scrambling for connections, about living life in color. It is about fear, about being alone, and about reaching out despite how very hard it is.
I think we are going to hear a lot about this book with its large scope of ideas offered in a small package through the eyes of a brilliant girl. I hope we do hear a lot about it. It should be read in classrooms, discussed and embraced.
Beautifully written, this book has the power to unite. Appropriate for ages 10-13.
Reviewed from Advanced Reader Copy provided by Philomel.
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