Sabtu, 16 Mei 2020

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Book Details

Title: Pixie Pushes On
Author: Tamara Bundy
Number of pages:
Publisher: Nancy Paulsen Books (January 14, 2020)
Language: English
ISBN: 052551516X
Rating: 5     9 reviews

Book Description

Review “Pixie’s wry first-person voice aptly conveys her inner turmoil and the flavor and hardship of rural life during World War II, along with a healthy dose of humor. . . . A powerful message of friendship, familial love, faith, and perseverance. Details of life on a farm during the war and the scourge of the polio epidemic are skillfully incorporated into the story. . . . Absorbing read . . . features an appealing heroine.”—School Library Journal Read more About the Author Tamara Bundy also wrote the middle-grade novel Walking with Miss Millie. She is a high school English teacher with a Master’s degree in writing, and is a former columnist for the Cincinnati Post (her regular column on being a mom also appeared on EWTN global Catholic radio). She lives in Cincinnati, Ohio. Read more Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Chapter 1Daddy burned all Charlotte’s bedding and blankets the day they took her away. Her dolly, her books, and her clothes too. Dang near burned everything.And I watched as my sissy’s things—and my hope of ever seeing her again—all went up in smoke.When I first saw Charlotte fall flat as a flapjack, I wasn’t worried. But when I helped her up, I could tell she was sweating out a fever something fierce. That’s when Doc Simpson came and told Daddy she needed to go away to the hospital.That’s also when all the grown-ups in my life started whispering every time I entered a room.Then when I overheard Grandma and Granddaddy on the back porch asking Mama, high up in heaven, to hold Charlotte’s hand, I feared my sissy was plain dead.And I was plain heartsick.I was heartsick my sissy had died, leaving me all alone after she promised she’d never leave like Mama did. Even after she pinky-swore she’d help me get through fifth grade with Miss Meany-Beany. And she’d never broke a promise before.After I spent all afternoon being heartsick with sadness, I come to find out she wasn’t dead at all. That made me feel a wash of relief the size of a waterfall.But seeing how I’m the reason my sister got sick in the first place, I was still plenty upset. Feeling that truth deep down made my insides hurt. And when my insides hurt so much, I wondered if it was because of sadness, guilt, or the same thing Charlotte had. Charlotte would know. She always knew what to say or do no matter what needed saying or doing.I figured it was ’cause I was feeling extra bad that Daddy and Grandma kept me home from school for a bit after Charlotte took sick. But it turns out that old school didn’t want me there! Daddy had to go all the way down to Center Street and talk to the head of schools to make them take me back.Imagine that! Begging them to send me to school. I told him not to bother—I’d just as soon walk barefoot in a field of bumblebees than go back to that school again.My teacher, Miss Meany-Beany, hates me. I know it. Charlotte had her last year and told me she wasn’t mean—but everybody likes Charlotte, ’cause she’s perfect.So Daddy made me go back to school.No sooner did I walk in the door than Big-Mouth Berta, whose daddy owns the grocery store, rushed up to me and said, “I heard Charlotte got the polio! Oh, poor, poor Charlotte!”And that was the first time I heard someone say Charlotte had polio.Just like the president of the United States of America!Polio.’Course that’s the reason she was sick! And I practically wrapped up the polio, put a bow on it, and gave it to her myself.I started to walk past Big-Mouth Berta when she added in a pretend whisper, “Stay away from Prudence, everyone. She probably has the polio too.”And that was my welcome back to school.Miss Meany-Beany told everyone I didn’t have polio. But I don’t think she’s certain herself, since every day she puts her clammy hand on my forehead when I get to school. And even though I’m cool as a cucumber, she makes me sit, every day, by myself in a row of desks only used for kids like Rotten Ricky to sit in when they do something wrong, like let a frog loose in school.And every day Miss Meany-Beany says, “Class, I’m sure Prudence is fine,” but instead they all must hear, Class, don’t touch her or you’ll catch your death of disease, since not one of my thirteen classmates has mustered up the courage to say boo to me. Not that they’d talked my ear off before—what with me being new to the school last winter. It’s not that I didn’t have any friends; it’s just that when you have a perfect sissy, you already have a perfect friend.That was all I needed then.And it’s all I need now. Chapter 2It was lunch, and I was eating the fried-egg sandwich Grandma makes for me every day even though I always tell her it’s cold and soggy by lunchtime. She reminds me she’s making do with the wartime shortages and rations, and since the hens are laying lots of eggs, we’re eating lots of eggs.I sat there on my lonely side of the classroom dreaming of the jam sandwiches Mama used to make me, back when she was alive and the war wasn’t changing everything for everybody. I was taking another bite of that cold, soggy sandwich, minding my own business, when I spied the ugliest bug crawling across the floor. But my bug watching was interrupted when something hit me smack in the middle of my forehead. I reached up to touch it—and wouldn’t you know—it was the slimiest spit wad ever thrown at a living person.Right then, I saw, plain as day, that boy whose name is Ricky looking at me—the boy I call Rotten Ricky (not having any friends here gives me lots of time to make up my own names for everyone). Rotten Ricky had this innocent look on his face, and he even had the nerve to smile at me!I didn’t hold that slimy, sticky, wet spit wad for a second before I threw it right back at him.It wasn’t my fault that Miss Meany-Beany picked that very moment to walk by—or that my perfectly aimed slimy spit wad landed smack in the middle of her forehead.And the moment it did, time stood still. Every single student in the entire fifth grade stopped what they were doing, including breathing. I’d bet anything that dang bug even stopped crawling across that floor.Miss Meany-Beany turned her head so slow, like she’d just figured out how to turn her head for the first time. That spit wad stayed right in the middle of her forehead like it belonged there. And as soon as her eyes focused on me, the hate shot out of them like chickens running from a fox.I wanted to run too.Instead, I tried to speak, except my mouth must’ve forgot how. “But . . . not . . . me . . . Rotten . . .” was all I could manage.Miss Meany-Beany’s mouth must’ve had the same problem as mine. “You . . . what . . . why? Closet . . . now!”She pointed her bony finger straight to the coat closet.But I didn’t move. Even though the calendar says it’s fall, someone must’ve forgot to tell the sun that, ’cause it burned down on us like it was still those dog days of summer. I imagined that coat closet had to be over a hundred degrees.”Now!” Miss Meany-Beany yelled, and as she did, the spit wad lost its place on her forehead and rolled down her face, in a slower-than-molasses way, and landed on her lace collar.A look of horror flashed across her face, and I knew I’d have a better chance of convincing our cow never to moo again. So I went into the hottest, stinkiest place in the entire school.I heard the rattle of the door closing right behind me before feeling something land in my hair that fell from the rafters.I needed to scream right then but feared the laughs of the other kids even more than I feared whatever was crawling on me. I started flapping my head back and forth, but whatever was crawling on me hung on, probably enjoying the ride. Ripping out the braids Grandma had spent half an hour on after bath night last week, I ran my fingers all over my scalp and through my hair.After I’d worked up a real sweat jumping around in that roasting-hot closet, that crawly thing must’ve slipped right off. I imagined I looked so frazzled that Grandma would’ve clucked her tongue at me the way she does sometimes when I’m not presentable.I finally settled myself and noticed two old desks stacked one on top of the other. If I unstacked them and set them side by side, I could make a place to lay myself down.So that’s just what I did.And as soon as my head hit the softness of my arm resting on the desk, my eyes shut fast.But that’s not even the worst part of my day. Oh no; getting hit with the spit wad, getting sent to the closet, getting dang near ate up by some mystery bug—all that was bad enough for my day—but that didn’t hold a candle to the part of my day that began when I woke up from that nap. Read more

Customers Review:

Set in a small Midwestern town on the heels of the Great Depression, Pixie Pushes On is the story of grief, loneliness and quick judgement. But it’s also the story of friendship, family support and faith.Pixie’s life was in upheaval when she suddenly moved to her grandparents’ farm. Still reeling from the loss of her mother, it certainly doesn’t help when her sister – her BEST friend – is diagnosed with polio and must be put into a residential hospital for treatment. Feeling abandoned and lonely, she fights with everyone around her, from her teacher and classmates, to the rather large, demanding chicken in the hen house. At the end of the day, she just KNOWS all of this is her fault.Tamara Bundy’s gift for capturing nuances of language and folksy dialogue allows the story to roll out like a freshly-cleaned picnic blanket. You will feel like you’re listening in on a private conversation between a grandfather and his granddaughter, or two new young adults trying to navigate the awkwardness of new friendship. Although Pixie is the star, the reader will be empathetic to every other character’s role in the larger picture. Trust me – you will root for all of them.Thanks to the author and Nancy Paulsen books for an early copy to review.
I LOVE the characters that Tamara Bundy creates! Prudence (Pixie, which I loved – my first childhood pet was named Pixie) is flawed for sure -she is stubborn, angry, sad, and sometimes mean. The story opens on one of her worst moments, for sure – but oh how I love this girl! She is relatable and real, and I have seen so many kids in my classes just like her – lashing out at the world, feeling hurt, feeling alone. Fortunately, Pixie has a wise Grandaddy, a tough-loving Grandma, and discovers some surprising friends as she opens her heart to give them “a chance to show who they really are.” She learns that others hurt too, and begins to see her world differently. The rural 1940’s setting was a perfect backdrop for Pixie’s story. The characters are so real I felt I knew them, and could hear their voices throughout the book. Pixie is “something else,” all right -she is funny, hopeful, and determined. I think what I loved best was that she shows young readers that kindness can be learned – it is a choice, a decision. This gives hope to those kids that feel like they are “trouble” and get stuck in that perception. It’s important to show them that we can all learn to be more kind, to open ourselves up to see things differently, including the way we see ourselves.
In the spirit of Charlotte’s Web, Pixie Pushes On invites readers –young and old –to experience life on the farm in the time of WWII. You will cheer for and cry with Pixie throughout this gem. A must read!
Thank you to Tamara Bundy and Nancy Paulsen for sharing an ARC with Collabookation.Pixie Pushes On is the story of a young girl figuring out that she has to push on, even though her life has it’s share of challenges. Pixie’s mother passed away, and now her sister is hospitalized with polio, which Pixie is sure is all her fault.What I love about this book:The polio discussion. So many of my students have no idea what polio is, and they are fascinated when we discuss the disease, it’s impact, and it’s (almost) eradication. This book will put a face and experience to the disease.The discussion about character change (and changing your perception of characters). Pixie has a nickname highlighting the terrible aspects of anyone she meets ~ but throughout the course of the book she realizes that people are not only what she believes they are. I will enjoy recommending this book to students when we discuss identity.Farm & family life. Pixie’s life isn’t simple. From the mean hen she has to combat daily to the bigger idea that animals on a farm need to be harvested, Pixie has to face some hard truths on a day to day basis. However, she does learn that everything is easier to face with the support of neighbors and friends.This is a sweet tale that will have students rooting for Pixie every step of the way.
Thank you so much to Tamara Bundy and Penguin Kids for sharing an ARC with our #bookexpedition group!This historical fiction set during World War Two stole my heart. Prudence (Pixie) has endured a lot at her young age. Her Momma passed on from sickness, so she, her sister Charlotte and her Daddy moved to her grandparents’ farm. There, Charlotte is stricken with polio and must be sent to a hospital, and Pixie believes it’s all her fault.Not only is she coping with that, but her neighbor Rotten Ricky, her teacher Miss Meany Beany, and classmate Big-Mouth Berta seem to have it out for her too.Life on the farm begins to look up when she and Charlotte start exchanging letters. And her daddy brings home a baby lamb named Buster for Pixie to raise. Taking care of Buster requires persistence and dedication, and also helps Pixie realize that those around her are hurting, too.I absolutely loved all the characters in this story. Pixie, her family, and friends will stick with me for a long time!With themes of family, friendship and persistence, this is a must add to school and classroom libraries!