‘Turnabout’

[MARCH 7, 2001]   Turnabout." Margaret Peterson Haddix. Simon & Schuster, 2000. 223 pages. Grades 6-10.

The year is 2085 and Melly is 16 again. In the year 2000 Melly and Anny Beth were asked if they wanted to be younger. "Now that was a stupid question to ask someone about to celebrate birthday 101." Melly, Anny Beth and others were injected with the unaging PT-1 drug. The drug was experimental, and even the doctors weren’t sure what would happen.

 

One year after the injection Melly "did feel like her brain had improved. She was sharper…, but why should she be losing her memory about her own life? It was like a whole year had been erased when she hit her 100th birthday again." It was almost as if they were recording over the old memories and replacing them with new ones.

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Most of the book takes place in 2085, 85 years after the injection. Anny Beth and Melly have unaged to 18 and 16 years old. Melly will have to give up her driver’s license on her next birthday when she will be 15. She is faced with the problem of how to tell the family she babysits for that she will no longer be able to drive the children places. Also, there is the problem of finding someone to be their guardian when they unage to the point they can no longer live alone and take care of themselves. This is a story of a race against time and an experiment gone wrong.

This is a very interesting fantasy about the future and the possibilities it could hold. Haddix tells us in her author’s notes at the end that she was surprised to learn in 1998, when she was halfway through her book, that researchers had figured out how to restore cells and prevent them from dying. Could the events of this story be played out in real life in this century?

[Pat Schlough, Lincoln Public Library]


‘Guts’

[MARCH 7, 2001]   Guts, the True Stories Behind Hatchet and the Brian Books." Gary Paulsen. Delacorte Press, 2001. 148 pages. Grades 5-9.

Gary Paulsen has written many adventure stories, including "Hatchet," "Brian’s Winter" and "Brian’s Return." "Guts" brings the phrase "write about what you have experienced" to a whole new level. Paulsen wants his books to be "real," so he has used many of his personal experiences in his writing.

Paulsen was a volunteer emergency worker, and thus witnessed heart attacks and plane crashes. Many chapters in this book describe his adventures in the wilderness in northern Minnesota, Canada and Alaska. "Moose Attacks," "Things That Hurt" and "Eating Eyeballs and Guts or Starving" are a few of the chapter titles. At one moment, he’s so scared of a snorting, raging moose all he can do is stand still and close his eyes. As he hears the moose race past him, he opens his eyes and watches the large animal stomp and rip a tree into little more than splinters. Another moment, he’s so hungry anything looks good to eat — and I mean anything!

 

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Reading this book will give you a new appreciation and respect for the woods and the writer. You will experience survival up close and personal, probably as close as you care to be! If you know someone who craves adventure, hand him or her this book. They won’t want to put it down until the last slimy bite has been swallowed.

[Pat Schlough, Lincoln Public Library]

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‘Hope Was Here’

[FEB. 28, 2001]   Hope Was Here," Joan Bauer, J.P. Putnam’s Sons, 2000, 186 pages.

Hope Yancy is a 16-year-old waitress who lives with her Aunt Addie, a well-known diner cook. Hope was born too early and too small, and her mother, Deena, didn’t want the responsibility, so she gave her to her sister Addie. There is no father in the picture, much to Hope’s distress, and Deena appears only once again in the story.

 

Hope says that her mother left her with two things. One she kept was her gift of waitressing. The other she threw away: her birth name, Tulip.

Hope and Addie live an interesting life working in diners across the country. With each move, Hope leaves her mark, "HOPE WAS HERE," in ballpoint ink somewhere on the premises.

As the story opens, Hope and Addie have been working in the Blue Box Diner in Brooklyn, N.Y. Addie was chief cook and part-owner of the diner with her partner, a man named Gleason. One evening he decided to clean out the cash register and the bank account and head for parts unknown with the night waitress, Charlene. Addie tried to hang on for a few months but had to close down before the bill collectors took it. That is the reason Hope and Addie are headed for Mulhoney, Wis., and the Welcome Stairways Diner.

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G. T. Stoop, the Quaker owner of the diner, has leukemia and needs Addie’s help to keep the diner running. Things get even more complicated when G.T. decides to run for mayor of Mulhoney against a corrupt incumbent, Eli Millstone. As the story progresses we are introduced to a myriad of colorful characters, from the diner employees to the residents of the town.

G.T.’s campaign is beset with problems from the start. There is a lot of crooked politics going on in Mulhoney, and Eli Millstone is right in the middle of it. Hope and Braverman, a young man that cooks at the diner, throw themselves into the campaign and each other’s lives.

 

The political theme of the story has a very contemporary plot twist that will entertain and interest anyone who followed our nation’s presidential race. The mix of dealing with G.T’s illness, small-town politics, and a budding romance for Hope and Addie, along with strong messages about values and self-esteem, makes for a very enjoyable and inspiring story.

Joan Bauer has written several highly acclaimed novels for young adults, including "Thwonk," "A Taste of Smoke," "On My Honor," "Backwater" and "Rules of the Road." This book is recommended for grade eight and up.

For more information, visit the library at 725 Pekin St. or call (217) 732-8878.

[Linda Harmon,
Lincoln Public Library District]

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