Life Riddles
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- $11.99
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- $11.99
Publisher Description
At twelve, Janelle wants nothing more than to be a writer. "Write what you know," advises her aunt Barbara. That seems like a riddle to Janelle: all she knows is her mama and her two little sisters, playing Pioneers when the electricity gets cut off, waiting and hoping for Daddy to find a job and come back home. Who'd want to read about a life like that?
But as Janelle starts putting it all on paper, she finds she does have something to say–about friendship, about getting through, and most of all, about what makes a family rich.
Melrose Cooper writes from the heart about a young girl who, step by step, makes her dream come true.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
As an aspiring author, seventh grader Janelle pays close attention to her librarian aunt's advice to ``write it down.'' Taking refuge in the stories she is constantly inventing, Janelle, the narrator, tries to block out the pain of her parents' separation and the financial worries that plague her hard-working mother. When her father eventually returns, the girl discovers some of the truth behind her aunt's ``life riddles,'' observations that Janelle ``never understood . . . till something happened to point things out.'' Believable as the oldest child who, unlike her siblings, understands the seriousness of her family's situation, the narrator also addresses a rarely discussed situation: being the ``Hershey bar''-colored daughter of parents with skin ``the color of coffee with double cream.'' Although Cooper (author of the picture book I Got a Family ) relies a bit heavily on the life-riddle motif, she offers readers grounds for optimism as she charts one family's survival through a sadly familiar terrain of ``lean times.'' Ages 9-12.