Sunday, July 8, 2012

Grounded for the summer!

Okay - after a week of insanely hot weather and power outages, I'm back in the swing of things with Dead End in Norvelt by Jack Gantos.  Somewhat of an autobiography, the story tells about 12-year-old Jack, who's grounded for the summer of 1962 after goofing around with his dad's old Japanese rifle and shooting it off by mistake.  About the only way out of the house is to help Miss Volker, an elderly woman with arthritic hands, by writing down her eloquently spoken obituaries for the unusually high number of old woman in Norvelt who are passing away. Although a lot of the story is funny, be warned that there's some gore: Jack is prone to impressive and frequent nosebleeds, and one of his friends teaches him about some of the finer aspects of dealing with dead bodies at her father's funeral home.  Between Girl Scout cookies, Hell's Angels, a fake (or maybe not) bomb shelter, and the mystery of the dying residents, there's a lot going on in this book that won the 2012 Newbery.

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