HC $17.95
for: Middle Grades
133 pgs.
Rating: 4
First line/s: "Mr. Willie pulls every last weed in the driveway cracks, then sweeps the concrete clean. Aunt Geneva comes out to pay him, but Mr. Willie doesn't want any money. 'A sandwich would be nice,' he says."
Mr. Willie also played the piano, though he now is a squatter in the falling-down carriage house of the falling-down (and empty) big house across the street. His fifteen-year-old cousin Damon is mouthing off to his mother, disappearing, and possibly getting into trouble. His nine-year old Cousin Monte is afraid of everything. And his Aunt Geneva is determined to adopt him, as she feels was his mother's wish. The turning point in the story comes when a couple purchase the crumbling house across the street, not to tear it down, as everyone had thought, but to create a school.Setting: Contemporary Cincinnati, OhioOne-Sentence Summary: After 11-year-old Jerome goes to live with his aunt and cousins after his mother dies of cancer, he has to learn to live without his precious piano.
Isn't this one of the homeliest/unappealing book covers you've ever seen? It certainly doesnt' say "pick me up!"I wasn't sure how to rate this book, 'cause I'm not sure how kids would like it. Throughout the book, Jerome is comparing everything that happens to him to his mother's last days and death. However, it's not particularly depressing, and it's a great way to worm yourself into Jerome's mind. And the storyline is engaging and proceeds in a believable manner. I discovered that I rather liked the whole package as I mulled it over after reading.
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