Walk two Moons
| Bezeichnung | Wert |
|---|---|
| Titel |
Walk two Moons
|
| Untertitel |
Winner auf die Newbery Medal
|
| Medienart | |
| Person | |
| Verlag | |
| Ort |
New York
|
| Jahr | |
| Umfang |
280 S.
|
| ISBN10 |
046594006509
|
| Annotation |
For reasons that are unclear to Sal Hiddle, her mother left the family farm in Kentucky for Lewiston, Idaho, and did not return. Sals grief-stricken father rents out the farm that Sal loves and uproots her to Euclid, Ohio, a suburb of Cleveland. Sal hates her new home and cannot accept her fathers disturbing relationship with red-haired Margaret Cadaver, a nurse who has persuaded Mr. Hiddle to move to Ohio for work. Sal refuses to believe that her mother will never return.##That summer, Gram and Gramps Hiddle, Sals paternal grandparents, take her on a six-day car trip from Euclid to Lewiston, Idaho. Sals goal is to reach their destination on Sals mothers birthday. The trio travels westward, retracing the route taken by Sals mother. To pass the time, Sal recalls the events that preceded her mothers departure and at Grams insistence, narrates a tale of her experiences in Euclid that past year. At the heart of the story is Sals friend Phoebe Winterbottoms grief over her mothers sudden disappearance. The imaginative Phoebe insists that her mother has been kidnapped by a lunatic. Phoebes loss parallels Sals loss, and Phoebes story brings Sals into sharper focus. The mystery is solved when Phoebes mother returns home with the lunatica son whom she gave up for adoption years before and whom her family has not been told about.##Sals story does not have a similar happy ending. Gram is dying of a stroke, and Sal has driven herself to Lewiston to visit the scene of her mothers death. The reader finally understands that Sals mother, who had suffered from an identity crisis, had set out for Idaho to find herself. When the bus in which she was riding careened off the road in Lewiston, all of the passengers died except for Margaret Cadaver, the last person to have seen Sals mother alive. The journey ends, Grams body is sent back to Kentucky for burial, and Gramps, Sal, and her father return to their beloved farm in Kentucky.##Sudden death and the grieving process are not subjects that lend themselves to humor. In Walk Two Moons, however, Sharon Creech addresses a childs profound sense of loss in a novel that is often richly funny. In a voice that is homespun and true, Salamanca (Sal) Hiddle, Creechs thirteen-year-old narrator, captures the peculiar behavior of family and friends as she travels west, following the journey her mother took before losing her life in a bus accident. Only at the journeys end is Sal fully able to accept the finality of her mothers death. And only at the novels end does the reader grasp the significance of the relationships between the characters and the incidents that occur along the way. Published in 1994, this poignant, comic novelthe authors second book for young adultswon the 1995 Newbery Medal.# ##About the Author##Known for writing with a classic voice and unique style, Sharon Creech is the best-selling author of the Newbery Medal winner Walk Two Moons, and the Newbery Honor Book The Wanderer. She is also the first American in history to be awarded the CILIP Carnegie Medal for Ruby Holler. Her other works include the novels Love That Dog, Bloomability, Absolutely Normal Chaos, Chasing Redbird, Pleasing the Ghost, and Hate That Cat, and two picture books: A Fine, Fine School and Fishing in the Air. These stories are often centered around life, love, and relationships -- especially family relationships. Ms. Creech's first novel for children, Absolutely Normal Chaos, was based on her own "rowdy and noisy" family. Growing up in a big family in Cleveland helped Ms. Creech learn to tell stories that wouldn't be forgotten in all of the commotion: "I learned to exaggerate and embellish, because if you didn't, your story was drowned out by someone else's more exciting one."# #With a knack for storytelling and love of reading, young Ms. Creech aspired to become a novelist: "To be able to create other worlds, to be able to explore mystery and myth -- I couldn't imagine a better way to live, except perhaps to be a teacher, because teachers got to handle books all day long." In college, Ms. Creech took her first writing courses and attended writing workshops. This renewed her enthusiasm for becoming a novelist. Following her studies in college and graduate school, Ms. Creech worked as an editorial assistant before deciding to become a teacher overseas. Now, after spending eighteen years teaching and writing in Europe, she and her husband have returned to the United States to live.#[webjunction.org]
|
Erhältlich in folgenden Bibliotheken
|
Schulbibliothek AHS Babenbergerring Wiener Neustadt |
