Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Homecoming by Cynthia Voigt


HOMECOMING by Cynthia Voigt

I thought this recent write-up was wonderful. If you have not read any of Cynthia Voigt's books...this book is an excellent place to begin.

On Behalf Of Richie Partington...
For those of you unfamiliar with it, HOMECOMING is the first book in a seven-book series by Cynthia Voigt. I was turned onto the book when I first went to work in the bookstore fifteen years ago. I happily consumed all seven books like there was no tomorrow. The second book in the series (which is in so many ways the second half of the initial story) was awarded the Newbery Medal in 1983, the third book was awarded a Newbery Honor, and the fourth book -- which really serves as a prequel to the series -- ranks right up there with THE WEDNESDAY WARS in its showing on an achingly personal level how the Vietnam War forever altered the underlying fabric of America.

HOMECOMING is the story of the four Tillerman kids (Dicey, James, Maybeth, and Sammy) from Cape Cod, whose poor and troubled mother packs them up in the car one morning with the intention of driving to her elderly aunt's house in Bridgeport, but then abandons the children in a mall parking lot just inside Connecticut. After a day of waiting for her return, it falls to thirteen year-old Dicey -- who fears that talking with authorities might result in their being separated from one another -- to keep them alive and lead them by foot to Great Aunt Cilla's house in Bridgeport. When things don't work out there as hoped -- to say the least -- Dicey must then lead them further on, to the very place where they might well be able to learn how her mother became who she is.

HOMECOMING is an extraordinary read because it is a survival story in which we come to know so much of the inner workings of each of these four children who are four real individuals. There are potential dangers to be faced that are personified in the various adult characters the siblings meet, and the story is groundbreaking in its subtle explorations of what drives these adult characters. In addition, Voigt time and again provides exceptionally intimate descriptions of the places -- the beaches, the roads, the houses, the small cities -- that the children experience while on their quest for a home.

"If you took home to mean where you rested content and never wanted to go anywhere else, then Dicey had never had a home. The ocean always made her restless; so even Provincetown, even their own remembered kitchen, wasn't home. That was why Dicey always ran along the sand beside the ocean, as if
she had to race the waves. The ocean wasn't home, then, and neither was anyplace else."

5 comments:

  1. Is this a 5th grade friendly book???

    ReplyDelete
  2. cool!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    ReplyDelete
  3. that sounds really cool!! is it a good book??

    ReplyDelete
  4. I would recommend this book for 5-8th grade students. I keep it in my young adult section so that it can be monitored. The material is written on a 5th grade reading level and would be okay...however, I would think the subject matter would be too difficult for a fourth grade student to comprehend? Does that help?
    It is a wonderful story of survival...a life most of us could never imagine!

    ReplyDelete
  5. Thank you that is alot of help!!

    ReplyDelete