Jumat, 10 April 2020

[PDF] Download What I Carry by Jennifer Longo | Free EBOOK PDF English

Book Details

Title: What I Carry
Author: Jennifer Longo
Number of pages:
Publisher: Random House Books for Young Readers (January 21, 2020)
Language: English
ISBN: 0553537717
Rating: 4,8     17 reviews

Book Description

Review “The power of relationship—both those experienced and those denied—is expertly explored throughout this novel with nuance and humanity… An exceptional addition to the coming-of-age canon.” —Kirkus Reviews, starred review“Longo (Up to this Pointe), a foster and adoptive parent, wrote the book for her adopted daughter, who wanted a “hopeful, happy” tale; she provides it—and the book, well-written and heartfelt, is a pleasure.” —Publisher’s Weekly, starred review“A beautifully realized tale of a teen’s search for her place in the world.” BookPage, starred review“The combination of authentic detail about the foster experience and respect for the protagonist makes this a particularly satisfying iteration.” —Bulletin “A deeply touching story about survival, hope, and love and an important addition to the literature of foster care. Muiriel’s journey will transfix readers from the first to the last page.”— Kathleen Glasgow, New York Times bestselling author of Girl in Pieces”What I Carry is not only a necessary book —it’s a charming, honest, and hopeful one. This is a story you’ll fall for.” —Deb Caletti, National Book Award Finalist, and author of the Michael L. Printz Honor Book, A Heart in a Body in the World “You will carry this book in your heart for a long, long time.”—Jeff Zentner, William C. Morris Award winning author of The Serpent King and Goodbye Days “Funny, painful, fresh, and real, Jennifer Longo’s What I Carry will break your heart and put it back together again.” — Martha Brokenbrough, author of Kirkus Prize Finalist The Game of Love and Death“A knock-down hope-filled story to fall in love with…Read this book. Then pass it on.” —Holly Cupala, author of Don’t Breathe a Word “This smart, funny, beautiful book is sure to mend hearts as well as open minds.” —Jo Knowles, author of Where the Heart Is  Read more About the Author JENNIFER LONGO is the author of Six Feet Over It and Up to This Pointe. She holds an MFA in Writing for Theater from Humboldt State University. Jennifer lives in Seattle with her husband and daughter and writes about writing at jenlongo.com. You can also find her on Twitter @JenLiaLongo. Read more Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. One You will never, in all your life, meet a person who packs a better suitcase than I do, and I’ll tell you right now, the secret is not organization–it is simplification. Get rid of your crap. Do not own things in the first place. Surrender the weight of what you carry and the wild, wide world is yours. Pack. Light. Which sounds easy–“when in doubt, go without” and all that–but to achieve true freedom you must be brutal as a consumer. Is dental floss on sale two for one? Don’t fall for it–one extra thing taking up room to pack and repack, and, besides that, what if your teeth all fall out before you ever need to use it? Now you’re the dummy hauling around extra floss for no reason. Yes, floss. Insignificant weight until you add it to that pen you bought, the T-shirt you had to have, the non-travel-sized thing of shampoo, until one day you wake up dragging the weight of a rolling suitcase taller and heavier than your own body and you’re exhausted trying to keep track of all these things you’ve convinced yourself you need–Where did I leave that? Did someone take the other? Why can’t I find my socks underneath all these stupid boxes of floss? Trapped.My packing credentials were passed to me from my namesake and honed since my birth, straight into foster care and never adopted. The longest I’ve lived in any house is eleven months, and now I am seventeen years old, so you do the math.At school people sometimes ask me what it’s like to live this way, which, I suppose for kids who lost or were removed from a family they once lived with and maybe loved, is a legit question, but for me is like asking a person born blind what it’s like to not see–it’s not like anything. I’ve got no objective context because I was left newborn, nameless, cord still attached, and jonesing for meth at John Muir Medical Center in California. A “foundling.” When no one came to claim me, the NICU nurses named me for him; Child Protective Services let them put Muiriel on my birth certificate, and I have grown into it. On my eighth birthday my social worker, Joellen, picked me up, and we walked a wooded Seattle path along the shore of the Salish Sea, and she told me how lucky I am to carry the honor of this name: Muir, a Scottish naturalist, father of our national parks, a guy who slept outside nearly all his life. We sat beside the water, and I unwrapped her gift to me: not a toy or the glitter hair barrettes I’d secretly hoped for. The Wilderness World of John Muir. A weighty, hardback anthology of Muir’s best writing about nature, curated by another naturalist, Edwin Way Teale, who arranged the essays in a way that makes them also a biography of Muir’s life.I mean . . . birthday dream of eight-year-old girls everywhere.The transcendental nature and half the vocabulary of the book were beyond me, of course, because third grade, but Joellen has, all my life, been more about what I need than what I think I want. I skipped rocks, and she told me Muir’s story like it was mine, his days a timeline of my own. “Muir’s whole life was about protecting the natural world because nature is vulnerable; it can’t defend itself against people. ‘Any fool can destroy trees. They cannot run away.’ ” I nodded. She read a passage to me, and marked it so I could find it again: Standing alone on the mountain-top it is easy to realize that whatever special nests we make–leaves and moss like the marmots and birds, or tents or piled stone–we all dwell in a house of one room–the world with the firmament for its roof–and are sailing the celestial spaces without leaving any track. “All living things, we are one family,” she said, “together in one home, sleeping beneath the same stars.” With my pinkie finger I petted the illustrated black bears hiding in the forest trees on the cover. I did not know then what first edition meant. Joellen put her hand on my head and made me look up at her.“Muiriel. Do you understand?” Not that day. But Joellen planted the seed of Muir’s wisdom that grew into the truth that comforts me now: he lived nearly all his life more at home outside than in, and I understand why. Every house I live in smells different; the rules and beds and people are never the same. But one walk outside and I am always home, beneath the same sky. Alone is not lonely. Nothing to miss, nothing and no one to wish or search for. John Muir set me free. He walked thousands of miles over mountain ranges and forded rivers; slept in trees and deserts and forests; and carried with him only a washcloth, a bar of soap, a loaf of bread, a compass, and, oddly, a stack of heavy books he felt were as vital as the bread–which I think is ridiculous–so I see his books and raise him one library card. But as Muir loved Thoreau, I love Muir, so every move to each new house, I pack The Wilderness World in with the socks. Socks are important. Warm, dry feet are key to movement, and therefore to freedom. Socks are packed pressed flat together and rolled, tight, like well-made sushi. Two pairs of shoes (indoor and outdoor), one raincoat, one lightweight warm coat, seven sausage-rolled shirts, three pairs of pants, one pair of shorts, two sets of pajamas, three bras, seven rolled-up pairs of underwear. Basically, your suitcase should look like a grocery store deli platter of cotton-pinwheel party sandwiches, exactly a week’s worth of outfits–laundry on Sunday. No new item of clothing is allowed in unless an old one is removed; anything reversible is twice as welcome in any well-packed case. Seriously, I could give a TED Talk on this shit and, oh, let us not forget the Holy Grail of packing: the toiletry kit. Flat, water-resistant nylon and plastic, four refillable bottles for soap and shampoo, pocket for a nail clipper, razor, tampons, hair ties, toothbrush, toothpaste, and your one floss.I can pack and be out of any house in four minutes flat.Except this day: eight minutes, twenty-three seconds. Dying in sweltering summer heat in a bedroom crammed with bunk beds the day after my seventeenth birthday, I kept Joellen waiting while I debated for the hundredth and maybe last time the merits of abandoning a secret I carry that renders my “John Muir Packing” TED Talk a bunch of hypocritical garbage.Hidden among the sushi socks and sausage shirts is a stash of compulsion in a blue-and-white-striped pillowcase tied in a knot. A sieve of burden and humiliation that in each house catches new things I collect and carry with me year after year, and I don’t know why. Muir would be so disappointed. Or maybe he would understand.When we try to pick out anything by itself, we find it hitched to everything else in the Universe. “Little blackbird nest,” Joellen said the one time she saw it, while helping me pack in fifth grade. I rushed to hide it. “Not everything has to be useful to be loved,” she said.In my experience, that’s debatable.Besides, these things I carry are not loved–a ship does not love the barnacles clinging to its hull. Still, even on this August day, I could not bear to let them go. I held the bag of worthless loot and agonized until Zola, the small girl who’d slept in the bunk beneath mine for the last few months, came in.“Here,” she said, and put a small metal thing in my hand. An Allen wrench.“In case you get lonely,” she said. “Okay?”I nodded. “How was swim class?” I asked. “You put your head under yet?”“Didn’t go.”“Why not?”She shrugged.“Oh, Zola.” I sat on the bed. “You have to remind her.” This foster mom was well intentioned but forgetful as hell. Especially, it seemed, with Zola’s very few activities.“Will you come see me ever?” she asked. “Can I write you?” I rolled the wrench around in my palm. “Not sure writing is allowed,” I lied. “But you never know when you’ll see someone again.”Zola’s face fell. My eyes stung.I didn’t want to keep Joellen waiting, and besides, if she had her way, this was maybe the last of packing, unpacking, packing, unpacking, so I dropped the Allen wrench into the pillowcase, removed one of the things and slipped it into my pocket, retied the knot, and carried it all in my perfect suitcase to her waiting car. To one more–one last–foster house.“You want to come out?”Zola nodded and trudged beside me.Joellen was in her usual spot at the curb to give the foster mom time to say goodbye to me because she always thinks parents will miss me, which is not entirely true; it’s just the older I get, the more help I am around the house, and that is what they will miss. I don’t blame them. Most foster parents are overworked and exhausted, and I am not only not a burden but often useful. Sometimes I feel bad for leaving, like I’m ditching a job knowing there’s no new employee to take on my duties.This foster mom hugged me, said she wished I didn’t have to go. “Maybe you’ll be back, though.” She sniffed. “A bad penny always turns up.”I ran back into the house and fetched a wad of toilet paper from the bathroom because she was crying a little and the house tissue box was empty. On my way out, I added Kleenex to the magnetic shopping list on the fridge and Zola Swim Class 8:00 a.m. to every Tuesday square in August on the paper calendar tacked to the wall.Zola hugged me around my middle, and I let her and felt my throat swelling tight, so I turned to the newest kid, a boy whose arrival this morning made my being here untenable–no more room at the inn; he’s younger and needs it more; our ages and genders can’t share a bedroom–who did not hug me because he is ten years old and scared and also doesn’t know me, so I waved to him, alone on the porch swing.I let Zola squeeze me a few seconds more. I put my hand on her head for a moment, then took the porch steps two at a time.Joellen popped the hatch of her worn-out Subaru, the car I’ve ridden in since I was still in a five-point car seat, and I tossed in my suitcase. Leaning across the passenger seat, she–small white lady, permed brown curls framing her round, middle-aged but unlined face–unlocked my door and smiled up at me. She’s shorter than me, and I’m barely five five. She sits on a pillow to drive. “Ready?” She smiled again.“What’s a bad penny?” I asked. “Why would it always turn up?”She took her hand off the wheel. “Who said that?”“No one. Just wondering.”“Well. It’s like . . . bad decisions come back to haunt you. Or a bad person keeps showing up where they’re not wanted. Like that. Why?”I looked forward to the road, not back at the house. Not at Zola alone on the porch. She’ll be okay. She’ll be fine. She’ll go home soon.One more year, starting today. All I have to do is stay unnoticed and unadopted until my eighteenth birthday and I’m free.“Let’s go,” I said, and buckled in. Two At the Seattle ferry dock, Joellen bought a ticket for one car, two passengers. She saw me eyeball the ticket and passed it to me. “Here you go, Blackbird.” I put it in my pocket and felt the thing I’d taken from the pillowcase, a tangled necklace chain I worked to unknot. My first ferry ride. A year from today I will buy my own ticket to go anywhere I want, anytime I want. Joellen pulled into the line of tourists’ and commuters’ cars leaving Seattle to cross the Puget Sound, thirty minutes over the blue-black water to what Wikipedia calls “a forested island the size of Manhattan, with a population equal to 0.4 percent of Manhattan’s population.” Thirty minutes from Seattle, where I’ve lived nearly my entire life, but I’ve never been to any of the islands because what foster parent has the time or gumption to haul a bunch of kids on a ferry across the Sound for fun?This island, Wiki also tells me, holds the grim distinction of being the place where America’s disgusting Japanese internment began but is described now as “twenty-seven square miles of land, much of it untouched forest, marked by thirty-two miles of trails and farms and fields, and rocky shoreline.” And houses and some schools. And now me.Our line moved, and Joellen parked in the ferry’s belly full of cars. It felt like driving on water. She led me up two flights of steps in a metal stairwell to the top deck, and we leaned together over the rail in the cold sea air and sunshine, Joellen wrapped in a blue down jacket, her short curls moving like mown lawn, me taller beside her in forgettable jeans and T-shirt, straight brown hair whipping around dark eyes in my nondescript white face. The ferry sailed from the dock, and Ivar’s Fish Bar, the Ferris wheel, the Space Needle–all of Seattle–grew smaller on the horizon, water churning in the ferry’s white wake. I breathed in the brackish sea air and tried to absorb the beauty of the water reflecting the summer sky, and the skyline, and I tried to exist in the moment, but electric nervous heat squeezed my heart.“You can ferry back for a visit whenever; just call and I’ll pick you up,” Joellen said, and then, for the gazillionth time, “I’m sorry. I tried so hard to find something in the city–”“I know,” I said, and almost added, It’s okay, even though it wasn’t.“There’s just nothing for you right now. I mean, there’s hotels, but I’m not doing that to you. Not one bed in a house in all of Seattle, and I wanted–”“Jo.”“Muir.”Her let’s have a talk tone. I love Joellen. I don’t love talks.“I need you to try,” she said. “It’s only twelve months. Think of it in weeks or hours, count them down, mark them off, do what you have to, but you’ve got to stay put. One house. Senior year matters for college, or just . . . for life. It’s important. You need to concentrate, no moving around, just this last one school. Please. For me.” Read more

Customers Review:

Jennifer Longo writes with humor and heart. I loved Six Feet Over It, Up To This Pointe, and I loved What I carry too. I’ve known Jennifer for years and I’m aware that What I Carry was inspired by her daughter and and informed by her own unique insight, personal experiences and quirky POV. I am blessed to actually know Jennifer and as I read I can hear her voice. She possesses a humor and warmth and often hysterically funny gift for story telling. Singular and rare and wonderful. I recommend all of her books. Up To This Pointe, Six feet Over It and What I Carry. I’m really looking forward to seeing these stories on the big screen.
Another beautiful read from Jennifer Longo. If you haven’t had an opportunity to meet her people, take the time. She writes from the heart and the head, shining lights into corners you may not realize are there. Every work is rewarding, and this one rewards in many ways. From insights into the foster care system, the National Parks and Forests, the battle between Muir and Pinchot, and what you can stuff into a pillowcase, it’s all there. You will finish this and realize that it’s time to think about what you carry.
I really don’t know what to say about this book. I can’t really decide how I feel about it. In some ways I feel like it was missing so much but in other ways that it was pure genius. I love some of stories behind all the things Muir carries from house to house but some of them fell flat for me and I found myself rushing to get through them. I loved the friendships between her Sean and Kira, but I didn’t like much else.
A beautifully written story about the strength & courage we all have within ourselves that sometimes we don’t realize is there until others show it to us. Longo has a way with words. She pulls you into her world & you don’t want to leave it. I loved Muir’s story of the struggles of aging out of foster care & finding her place in the world. I highly recommend this novel.
What I Carry was an amazing book.
This was amazing – fantastic – stupendous – incredible. I don’t know that I have an adjective for how much I adored this book. I love foster care stories anyway. But the added piece of Muir preparing to age out of foster care – and all of the ways she has developed to prepare herself for that and protect herself for that – really grabbed my attention. There’s a great balance here between Muir’s internal processing and her history (told creatively through her thoughts on packing light and the trinkets she saves from past foster homes) and the community pieces as she finds a circle of people who care about her and who she can care about, too. The social commentary around foster care and adoption as well as racial issues (Japanese internment, white privilege, etc.) was SPOT ON. I learned things while I was swept up into this story. I loved every moment. Do NOT miss this one! (Language, off-page sex)
I received an ARC as a gift. My thoughts and opinions are my own. Any quotes I use are from an unpublished copy and may not reflect the finished product.What I Carry was a brilliant, fantastic read! I am so happy and thankful my #otspsecretsister gifted it to me! Before receiving it in one of my boxes, I wasn’t aware this book even existed, which is a tragedy, since it was absolutely perfect for me. I’m a fan of John Muir and his accomplishments, so all the snippets and quotes from his life and his works were an added bonus. They were gems that weren’t hidden, but there for the entire world to find and enjoy.Muir and Muiriel made this story what it is, and the belief that you should do what you can to help those who can’t help themselves. In Muir’s case, trees (and nature in general) are defenseless and should be preserved. Muiriel was preparing herself to age out of the system, so she tried not to get attached to other people or places. She stopped caring about being adopted, but she still looked after the other foster kids that she shared homes with. Muiriel didn’t keep in touch afterwards (with the exception of Zola), but she did what she could while she was there.Adults have the power to really screw with a child’s perception of the world and themselves, and some automatically assume foster kids are “trouble” or that they did something to get placed in foster care. A child does nothing to end up in foster care. The fact that they’re there is partly due to a flawed system, and the blame should be solely placed on the adults in their lives. Adults have failed them in one way or another (either by family members and/or the government), and they shouldn’t be blamed for being upset about it their circumstances. They have every right to feel angry, hurt, and betrayed.There’s nothing wrong with them, they just don’t have a cookie cutter family.Jennifer Longo said she wrote this book because her daughter asked her to. Her daughter said she wanted a story that was realistic based on her experiences, and that not everyone was molested or abused in foster care. Sometimes, it just sucks. I think the author’s personal experiences mixed with her daughter’s really made this book something uniquely original. Muiriel’s story will be something others can relate to, while also being informational for those with no experience with the subject matter.I really loved the secondary characters! Francine, Joellen, Kira, Zola, Sean – – it was an amazing group of people that I thoroughly enjoyed reading about. The author manages to squeeze in other important topics throughout the book, and I never felt like she was beating me over the head with the information. Everything flowed from one thing to the next, and I took my time getting to the end.There’s a subtle romance in the book between Sean and Muiriel, but the book focuses on Muiriel and how her experiences in foster care have shaped who she is today. She doesn’t want to let herself love or care too deeply, because she’s afraid of what that would mean for her future. The plan has always been to get out and make it on her own. Somehow. However, she can’t keep herself from caring about the new people in her life that seem to need her just as much as she needs them.Natan was despicable. Tiana and Katrina were incredibly frustrating. Racist white people and just dumb adults in general made me want to throw things – – but this was all intentional. The author paints a realistic picture of what it’s like growing up in foster care, and how broken the system can be. There are good people, like Joellen and Francine, that do what they can to make it better, but there are so many kids… it’s impossible to make sure they all end up in a nice home with nice people.When I finally caught on to why the book was titled the way it was, it added an entirely new layer to my experience with this story. It was well-written, exceptionally realistic, and beautifully rendered.I could honestly go on and on about how much I loved this book and its characters, and I could probably keep typing about how well the author addressed certain issues, but I’ll leave it at this: What I Carry was an amazing, thought-provoking read that I plan on reading again and again. There’s something for everyone! Great characters, friendships, a subtle romance with a genuinely good guy, awesome parents and adults, and people fighting for what they believe in. You have characters overcoming obstacles and learning about themselves, school bullies and judgmental educators. It was practically perfect in every way.
My teen read this and liked it so much, I had to borrow it from her. I got sucked right in – I see why my daughter loved it! This is a beautiful story that combines many layers (the complexity of identity, the current reality of the foster care system, US history, racial & social justice, romance, the importance of the natural world, preservation vs conservation, coming of age, resilience, character growth, and more), all woven together in Longo’s skilled hands so that everything is balanced, and the loving message at the heart of this story shines out in a voice that rings true to life.