Showing posts with label Coming-of-Age Books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Coming-of-Age Books. Show all posts

Saturday, July 25, 2020

New Book Alert: The Rez: An American Love Story by G. Michael Madison; Bleak, Moving, Realistic, and Uplifting Story About Life on a Pacific Northwest Reservation



Ñew Book Alert: The Rez: An American Love Story by G. Michael Madison; Bleak, Moving, Realistic, and Uplifting Coming of Age Story About Life on a Pacific Northwest Reservation

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews


Spoilers: G. Michael Madison's book, The Rez is one of those type of books in which the Reader must arrive prepared: with a box of tissues and the phone number to their local counseling service on hand. It is a somber realistic book about life on a Pacific Northwest Reservation. It is very honest and bleak about the poverty, illness, and broken families that exist in many of these reservations. However, it is also very moving with plenty of heartwarming and hopeful moments spread throughout.

The Tulalip Indian Reservation, Washington is seen through the eyes of Jonny Esque, the third son and one of ten children total, of Franc and Lois Esque. Jonny is a very shy sensitive boy, mostly silent because of a speech impediment and spends his time tagging along with his cooler more athletic older brother, Caj and being mothered and irritated by his seven sisters. One day while following Caj up the bluffs, Jonny finds himself in the white affluent neighborhood of Mission Heights. He immediately catches the eye of Nikki D. Thomas, a girl who is new to the neighborhood. Despite their different economic positions, family backgrounds, and her mother's disapproval, Jonny and Nikki D. become fast friends. That friendship lasts them through the turbulent times of the 1960's and their own personal problems and developing maturity.


The book is pretty straightforward how it portrays the daily life of the Esque family. Franc tries to be a leader, but receives failure at every turn, so he finds solace in the bottle. His temper makes the Esque home a tense one. The younger children hide from their father rather than risk provoking him.

Lois is a white woman who married Franc for love, but also to escape the sexual abuse within her own family. She appears as a sickly weak willed woman. However, she shows a lot of tremendous inner strength by protecting her children from Franc's wrath and by loving the Tulalip community and becoming a part of it.

The Esque children deal with their unhappy home life in various ways. They act out in school like Caj, take a parental role with the younger children like Claire, or keep to themselves feeling invisible like Jonny. Their oldest brother, Gray, has become a juvenile delinquent and is now residing in prison. It's a hard life and the family knows it.


There are several passages that reveal the hardship and poverty that the family goes through. They are on the brink of starvation a few times. When Lois becomes ill with a nervous breakdown, the children are separated and sent to various Indian boarding schools.

Jonny in particular has a rough time of it. The money that is supposed to be sent for his welfare is late in arriving. He has to suffer from other kids taunting him because he has to wear the same clothes and shoes every day. Madison pulls no punches in describing how hard life is for this family.

Even though, Nikki D.'s family is smaller and wealthier than Jonny's family, it is just as dysfunctional. Her father, Nick, is an alcoholic like Franc, but instead of turning his rages and frustrations outward, he turns inward. He is a meek quiet little man with a domineering wife who lives a life of quiet desperation.

Ginny, Nick's wife and Nikki D.'s mother, is the total opposite. She is scarred from her childhood as the daughter of a Chinese immigrant mother who delighted in verbally abusing her. In adulthood, Ginny focuses all her attention on pushing her daughter to succeed in school and be a part of a high social set. Even though, Ginny comes from an immigrant family herself and had suffered from insults because of her Chinese heritage, she fails to recognize her own racism towards the Esque family and the Tulalips. She refuses to let Nikki D. befriend them to the point of making a scene at Nikki D.'s birthday party when Jonny arrives.


Nikki D. however is determined to be Jonny's friend. The two recognize a kinship with each other because of their mutual dysfunctional backgrounds. Nikki D. Is so determined to be accepted among Jonny's peers that in one horrific passage, she hunts an animal to prove it. She also gets very confused the more mature she gets and the closer she grows to the Esque family. She develops a crush on Caj and has a platonic friendship with Jonny. However, she fails to notice that Jonny's feelings are anything but platonic.


Even though the book is bleak, there are some moments that keep it from being overly depressing. There are some really heartwarming passages. One of them occurs between Lois and Ginny. After Ginny evicts Jonny from Nikki D.'s party, Lois confronts her. The Reader is prepared for a takedown of a total racist bitch. Instead what happens is that both women reveal their insecurities and love for their children and a life long friendship is formed.

While Ginny is still pushy towards Nikki D.'s achievements, she emerges from this conversation as a better person that sees the error of her formerly racist ways. She becomes a true friend to the Esque family and helps provide financial aid to the Tulalip Reservation. Lois' inner strength and love for her children is also revealed in this passage, as she helps make this change happen.

There is also hope provided as the kids grow older and become more active in the world around them. Since the book is set in the '60's, it reveals the youthful energy of that time when young people were excited to get involved and be a part of the world around them. Those A-Changing Times are particularly shown through Nikki D. and Jonny.

Nikki D. is traumatized by the death of John F. Kennedy. This propels her to become involved with politics. She becomes an ardent Feminist and supporter of the Anti-War Movement. Her beliefs are tested when her new boyfriend, Beau enlists to fight in Vietnam. She is a woman of high standards and beliefs, but uncertain about what she wants. Does she want a steady high society boy like Beau, adventure and excitement with a known heartbreaker like Caj, or someone who is a good friend like Jonny? This sexual confusion frustrates her as she takes an active part in the world at large.

Another character who changes because of their involvement is Jonny. In fact, his is the strongest change for the better. He first gains strength at the boarding school when he becomes fed up with the mistreatment. He ties himself to a flagpole to protest the way he and the other Native American students are treated at the school.

As he matures, Jonny becomes an active leader at the Tulalip Reservation, the leader that his father wanted to but failed to become. Caj goes backwards when he returns from Vietnam, falling into the same alcoholic and unhappy marriage pattern that his parents fell in. Their sisters follow their own paths (which will be elaborated upon in the next book, Sisters). However, it is Jonny who emerges as the hero and the strongest character.

Jonny becomes a spokesperson for the tribe and raises funds for a new community center. His best moment occurs after a death in the family. At the funeral, Jonny the once shy kid who tried to be invisible, gives an impassioned eulogy sending love and blessings to his friends and family. Jonny's actions provide hope for the future that he won't make the same mistakes that his parents did and live a life of poverty and despair. Instead, he will lift his community upward.


There are two important symbols throughout the book that symbolize Jonny's trajectory. The main story is surrounded by a wraparound tale told by a storyteller about a mouse traveling amongst other animals to discover his true identity. The second is an eagle that flies overhead a few times and appears as a source of encouragement towards Jonny leading him to the next step in his life. It becomes apparent that Jonny started out as the mouse, nervous and uncertain and having to experience the world before he recognized his part in it. Then he became the eagle, strong, confident, and a leader that can soar above his despair and lead his tribe above that despair as well.

Saturday, June 16, 2018

Classics Corner: The Perks of Being A Wallflower by Stephen Chbosky; An Insightful Look Inside One Year of a High-School Boy


Classics Corner: The Perks of Being A Wallflower by Stephen Chbosky; An Insightful Look Inside One Year of A High-School Boy
By Julie Sara Porter
Bookworm Reviews

Spoilers: The Perks of Being A Wallflower by Stephen Chbosky is not a big plot-filled novel. Instead it is filled with different various incidents which contribute to the characterization of an introverted teen and his complicated relationships with family, friends, and girlfriends.

Charlie writes letters to an unnamed ”Friend.” The Friend is never revealed and there are even implications that he doesn't exist. Instead the letters give Charlie a chance to unload his deepest emotions and confused thoughts about the world around him.

Most of Charlie's entries consist of his friendship with Patrick and Sam, a quirky brother and sister who welcome Charlie with open arms and encourage him to be more outgoing. He is still grieving over the suicide of a friend and has a hard time relating to people but Patrick and Sam help bring him out of his shell.

With Patrick and Sam, Charlie embraces new things like driving down tunneled bridges while listening to classic rock. (In a terrific passage, Charlie does this and remembers how he “felt infinite.”) They also love to watch The Rocky Horror Picture Show. Charlie at first feels out of place with the crazy costumes, bizarre audience participation, and Patrick’s portrayal of Frank N’Furter and Sam's as Janet. But he eventually adapts and becomes a proud “Time Warp”er.

He also gets involved in his friends’ complicated love lives and that bleeds into his own. He discovers that Patrick is gay when he catches him in an embrace with Brad, a closeted football player. Patrick and Brad’s relationship is hidden until Brad’s abusive father finds out. Brad, in an attempt to push Patrick away, joins in a bullying incident that puts Patrick in the hospital.

Sam and Charlie also have relationship issues. Over the course of the book they date other people but begin to realize they feel that they are more than friends. This moment climaxes when Charlie goes to a party with Sam, her boyfriend, Craig and his current girlfriend, Mary Elizabeth. During an intense time of drinking, drugs, and game of Truth or Dare, Charlie is dared to kiss the prettiest girl at the party and he kisses….Sam. Needless to say his relationship with Mary Elizabeth does not last.

There are also other characters who help shape Charlie’s coming of age journey. There's Bill, Charlie's English teacher who recommends novels for the teen to read like Camus’ The Stranger and Fitzgerald's This Side of Paradise. Charlie also does extra credit essays on what he reads to share that love of literature with Bill finding a kindred spirit in his teacher.
There's Charlie's sister who is involved in an abusive relationship. When Charlie accidentally reveals this, she becomes furious with her kid brother and continues her relationship in secret.

Then there's Aunt Helen, Charlie's favorite relative. She is long dead but she still remains a part of Charlie's life. She haunts his memories as he remembers her death in a car accident on her way to get him a birthday gift. He also remembers that she had some difficult unspoken incidents in her past that caused her to withdraw from others except Charlie. Opening up his feelings for Aunt Helen reveal some of Charlie's current difficulties with relationships.

There is one revelation about Aunt Helen which is brilliantly foreshadowed and leads to a definite change in Charlie's behavior and relationships. However, for an important plot point, it’s placement in the second to the last chapter make the revelation and aftermath a little rushed. It would have served better to be in the middle of the story where the aftermath would be central to Charlie's development.

However, The Perks of Being A Wallflower is one of the best examples of the life of a teenage boy and the complexities that go into those years when we are still trying to figure out who we are and who we are going to become.


Sunday, January 21, 2018

Forgotten Favorites: Second Best by David Cook: A Moving Father-Son Story

Forgotten Favorites: Second Best by David Cook: A Moving Father-Son Story
By Julie Sara Porter, Bookworm Reviews

Spoilers Ahead: Second Best is not a well known book and the 1994 film starring William Hurt and Chris Cleary Miles is even less so. But it should be recognized as a moving story about two wounded souls, a 37-year-old man and a 10-year-old boy who find their way to each other becoming a family.

Graham Holt is the Postmaster of a small English village. An introvert, Graham is unable to connect with most people because he felt neglected by his parents who had a loving relationship with each other but not with their son. After his mother dies and his father suffers a painful stroke, Graham longs to adopt a son.

This realization comes about humorously as Graham absently writes "a son" on a shopping list between "milk" and "something for lunch (ham or pork pie." ("Was there a row of shelves at Safeway on which sat boys, school uniformly dressed, priced by size, colouring and age, and with sell-by dates stamped to the soles of their shoes?" Graham idly wonders.) Realizing that this is more than an idle thought, Graham feels lonely and begins the adoption process to foster a son.

Enter James "Jamie/Jimmy" Lennards, a troubled young boy. He has very little memories or affection for his mother, who committed suicide when he was 3, but he dearly loves his father, John, a repeat offender whom James has built up as a mercenary or Freedom Fighter. Because of his separation from his parents and his placements in different foster homes, James has a tendency to act out in violent outbursts and frequent self-harm.  However, he harbors the dream that he and his father,.John, whom he "loves best in all the world", will be reunited together as a family.

Much of the book deals with Graham and James going through the foster process together. Graham follows the different rules and regulations to the letter. He fears opening up to James on a personal level, suggesting that they begin as a "partnership". James having been through the foster process knows how to play the game better than Graham and knows when to show affection, when to withhold, and when to manipulate. The two almost dance around each other uncertain but also longing to be loved.

It becomes a relief for the Reader when the two finally open up to each other. A camping trip in which James shows experience and Graham reveals ineptitude ends up pretty well as the two bond. After Graham is overcome by the death of his father, James comforts him whispering that everything will be okay giving Graham a conch shell as a reminder of the only time Graham was happy with his father.

As the two open up, Graham and James'  characters develop as Graham becomes stronger and more protective of James and James becomes more tender and more respectful towards Graham. Cook develops his two lead characters well with such care.

Another character that develops thanks to Cook's excellent writing is that of John, James' biological father. While he has a criminal past , he is never written as an unrepentant bastard. A letter that he writes to James is broken with remorse about his failure to be in James' life. Then when he returns to the book, depressed and dying from AIDS, Graham lectures him like an older brother but is empathetic enough to invite him to live with him and rekindle his relationship with James.

This unique living arrangement and a final chapter in which Graham chases after James, who is terrified at the sight of his broken dying father, leads to Graham, James, and ultimately John to accept each other as a loving family.