Tuesday, April 2, 2013

Girl Child by Tupelo Hassman

This is one of the new books I just ordered from the Library. I saw this book reviewed in a magazine recently as an upcoming popular read. I immediately grabbed it and brought it home for Spring Break. I truly enjoyed this coming og age novel of a young girl trying to find her way with an unreliable mom and an interesting community of latch key children. I recommend this one for kids and adults.

A New York Times Book Review Editors’ Choice
 
Rory Hendrix, the least likely of Girl Scouts, hasn’t got a troop or a badge to call her own. But she still borrows the Handbook from the elementary school library to pore over its advice, looking for tips to get off the Calle—the Reno trailer park where she lives with her mother, Jo, the sweet-faced, hard-luck bartender at the Truck Stop.

Rory’s been told she is one of the “third-generation bastards surely on the road to whoredom,” and she’s determined to break the cycle. As Rory struggles with her mother’s habit of trusting the wrong men, and the mixed blessing of being too smart for her own good, she finds refuge in books and language. From diary entries, social workers' reports, story problems, arrest records, family lore, and her grandmother’s letters, Tupelo Hassman's Girlchild crafts a devastating collage that shows us Rory's world while she searches for the way out of it.

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