TGIF: Book Olympics

image courtesy of greads.com

TGIF at GReads is a fun feature for answering a book-blogging question posed by Ginger.

This week the question is: Book Olympics: In the spirit of the Olympics, which books would you give the gold, silver, and bronze medals to? It can be from any genre, new or old.

Today’s Category: Tearjerkers

The Bronze goes to:

Okay for Now by Gary D. Schmidt– For making me cry, then laugh, all while driving, making me look like a crazy lady.

The Silver goes to:

The Knife of Never Letting Go by Patrick Ness– One word: Manchee.

The Gold goes to:

The Fault in Our Stars by John Green– Pretty sure I woke up the day after finishing this with a crying hangover.  You know, puffy eyes and a slight headache.  Many tears were shed.

What are your picks for the Book Olympics?  Alternately, what is your favorite Olympic sport to watch?  (I’ll admit that I am crazy-in-love with synchronized diving, beach volleyball, and, of course, gymnastics.)

Okay for Now- Gary D. Schmidt

Goodreads summary:

“The Dump” is what Doug Swieteck calls his new home in upstate New York. He lands there in the summer of 1968, when the Apollo space missions are under way, Joe Pepitone is slugging for the New York Yankees, and the Vietnam War is raging. At home he lives with a father who has lost his way and a brother accused of robbery. And Doug’s oldest brother is returning from Vietnam. Who knows what wounds his missions have given him?

But Doug has his own mission, too, and it begins when he first sees the plates of John James Audubon’s Birds of America at the local library. His mission will lead him to Lil Spicer, who shows him how to drink a really cold Coke, to Mrs. Windermere, who drags him to a theater opening, and to the customers of his Saturday grocery deliveries, who together will open a world as strange to him as the lunar landscape.

Swieteck, who first appeared in Gary D. Schmidt’s Newbery Honor book The Wednesday Wars, will discover the transforming power of art over disaster in a story about creativity and loss, love and recovery, and survival

I listened to Okay for Now on audiobook read by Lincoln Hoppe.  Hoppe is the perfect narrator for this story.  He’s got the right sort of accent for a kid from Long Island and he nails the tone of all the rhetorical questions Doug peppers his story with.  This was also a great audiobook experience because the story is pretty linear… no jumping between characters or times or places.

Doug Swieteck (who I kept accidentally calling Todd for some reason) is such a great character.  His jerk of a father uproots the family from their home in Long Island to take a job at a paper mill in stupid Marysville, New York (Doug’s words, not mine) in the summer of 1968.  Doug is stuck trying to battle the negative impressions people have of him because of his twisted criminal brother and his drunk, abusive, loud-mouth father.  He has several devastating secrets.  And not so secretly, he’s poor and can be a smart ass.  But in spite of all those things stacked up against him, Doug manages to create a life for himself in Marysville.  He makes friends, he discovers his talents, works hard at school, and discovers the amazing community around him.  His resilience was pretty incredible.  I, like the citizens in Marysville, couldn’t help but love this boy.  I cried for him.  I laughed with him.  My heart swelled when good things happened for him and broke when bad things happened.

My only complaint is that the heartwrenching beauty of the book diminishes as the book goes on.  Nearly everyone ends up with a happy ending, some of which involve over-the-top scenarios, melodramatic circumstances, and bending a character or two until they are almost broken.  I was thrilled that Doug got a happy ending, but I am not sure it was the appropriate ending for this story.

Still, I think this a really great book and would highly recommend it to anyone who likes well-done child characters and coming-of-age/into-one’s-own stories.  It will have you both laughing and tearing up!

Bonus Points*

  1. Baseball– Doug is a big Yankees fan (booooo) and will often drop baseball stats into the story.  He also will describe his life in stats.  As a baseball fan, this was a pretty endearing part of the story.
  2. Audubon– I’m not sure if the Audubon paintings are included in the print edition of this book, but I had to google all of them just to get an image of them.  Schmidt does a nice job of using the different birds to symbolize different stages in Doug’s life.
  3. The language–  Doug has a very particular way of speaking and there are certain phrases he uses repeatedly (“stupid Marysville, New York” or “my brother’s twisted criminal mind” for example) and this really makes his character come to life.  I’m not lying, it’s pretty great.  (that’s another of his, too.)

Other Reviews:
The Librarian Who Doesn’t Say Shhh! inspired me to pick this one up and I’m so glad I did!

*I am borrowing this little feature from Candice at The Grown-Up YA because it is an awesome way to share some random tidbits about a book!