Download Eventown, by Corey Ann Haydu

Download Eventown, by Corey Ann Haydu

Is Eventown, By Corey Ann Haydu book your favourite reading? Is fictions? Just how's regarding history? Or is the most effective vendor novel your selection to fulfil your spare time? Or perhaps the politic or spiritual books are you hunting for now? Right here we go we offer Eventown, By Corey Ann Haydu book collections that you require. Great deals of numbers of books from numerous industries are supplied. From fictions to scientific research and spiritual can be browsed and figured out right here. You could not fret not to find your referred publication to review. This Eventown, By Corey Ann Haydu is among them.

Eventown, by Corey Ann Haydu

Eventown, by Corey Ann Haydu


Eventown, by Corey Ann Haydu


Download Eventown, by Corey Ann Haydu

Eventown, By Corey Ann Haydu. Let's read! We will certainly often figure out this sentence all over. When still being a children, mama utilized to purchase us to constantly review, so did the instructor. Some e-books Eventown, By Corey Ann Haydu are completely checked out in a week and also we need the responsibility to sustain reading Eventown, By Corey Ann Haydu Just what about now? Do you still enjoy reading? Is checking out just for you that have commitment? Definitely not! We right here provide you a brand-new book qualified Eventown, By Corey Ann Haydu to read.

When some people checking out you while reading Eventown, By Corey Ann Haydu, you could really feel so pleased. But, rather than other individuals feels you need to instil in on your own that you are reading Eventown, By Corey Ann Haydu not because of that factors. Reading this Eventown, By Corey Ann Haydu will offer you more than people admire. It will certainly guide to know more than the people looking at you. Already, there are numerous sources to understanding, checking out a book Eventown, By Corey Ann Haydu still becomes the first choice as an excellent means.

When you have this behavior to do in daily, you can be abundant. Rich of experience, rich of expertise, lesson, and also abundant of competent life can be acquired properly. So, never be question or confused with just what this Eventown, By Corey Ann Haydu will give to you. This most recent publication is once again a very fantastic book to read by people like you. The content is so appropriate and also matches to just what you require currently.

This publication is served in soft data forms. You could download it. One that will certainly affect you to read this publication is that it can be your very own choice making much better feels. Your life is yours. As well as picking this Eventown, By Corey Ann Haydu as your analysis product is additionally your option. Yet below, we really recommend you to read this book. You can discover what exactly the elements we provide. Simply get this book as well as review it, so you could obtain the factors of why you have to review.

Eventown, by Corey Ann Haydu

From School Library Journal

Gr 5-7-What would you give up to always be content, to never experience grief or intense anger? Would you give up choice, variety, creativity, joy? These are exactly the questions addressed when Elodee and her twin sister Naomi move with their parents to Eventown in order to get a fresh start in their lives. The family has experienced something terrible-an unknown event from which they have not been able to recover. All of that changes upon the family's arrival in their new town. It is quite literally a place where the sun always shines. There are no cars needed in Eventown since everyone bikes, the neighbors are friendly, and their new school is pleasant. Her parents are happy, as if the strain on them has been lifted, and her sister fits in like a glove. Elodee is only one who feels a distant strangeness, as if it is all a little too pleasant. Elodee begins to question her "perfect" new home. She notices that all the houses look exactly the same, the library is filled with blank books, and the ice cream shop only serves three flavors. Elodee must being to unravel her family's past in order to figure out what's missing and find true emotional closure for all of them. ­VERDICT An emotionally complex and wonderfully told story that will capture tween readers.-Patricia Feriano, Montgomery County Public Schools, MDα(c) Copyright 2011. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Read more

Review

“Would life be better if we could forget the past? That’s the question Corey Ann Haydu poses in her engrossing Eventown. With its embedded questions about the consequences of erasing all your problems, Eventown will doubtless hit many a middle grade reader’s sweet spot.” (New York Times Book Review)“A wonderful and inventive story about being a kid in an imperfect world—beautiful, mysterious, and deeply satisfying.” (Rebecca Stead, Newbery Medal-winning author of When You Reach Me and Goodbye Stranger)★ “At once enchanting, heart-rending, and bittersweet.” (Kirkus Reviews (starred review))★ “An emotionally complex and wonderfully told story.” (School Library Journal (starred review))★ “[A] thought-provoking novel... [A] memorable and brave heroine.” (Publishers Weekly (starred review))“Readers will feel for the brave, unconventional Elodee, who both affirms her individuality but also feels the loneliness of it... A hope-tinged tale about the long aftermath of tragedy.” (ALA Booklist)“Haydu brings a different dimension with real poignancy... less The Giver and more Pleasantville... [Eventown] will reel in readers looking for family dramas as well as those seeking a little ideological stretching, and it will leave them with plenty to discuss about the price of walling yourself off from pain.” (Bulletin of the Center for Children’s Books)“A marvelous defense of messiness, mistakes, and uncomfortable conversations ... this book is pure Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind meets Pleasantville.” (Betsy Bird of Fuse 8)“Corey Ann Haydu doesn’t shy away from tough topics in her books. Eventown is no exception.” (Time for Kids)“[An] original, thought-provoking and engaging novel exploring how our stories shape us and can help us heal from even the most terrible loss... Haydu offers an inspired creation in the “perfect world” of Eventown.” (Buffalo News)

Read more

See all Editorial Reviews

Product details

Age Range: 8 - 12 years

Grade Level: 3 - 7

Hardcover: 336 pages

Publisher: Katherine Tegen Books (February 12, 2019)

Language: English

ISBN-10: 0062689800

ISBN-13: 978-0062689801

Product Dimensions:

5.5 x 1.1 x 8.2 inches

Shipping Weight: 14.2 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)

Average Customer Review:

4.0 out of 5 stars

2 customer reviews

Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

#13,653 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Every year various dictionaries and encyclopedias try to determine what the Word of the Year is, and every year they make some pretty good choices. Here’s one that I don’t think they’ve done yet, but that’s been on a lot of minds anyway: Discomfort. There’s been a lot of talk about it lately, particularly in terms of the value of uncomfortable/valuable conversations. I am, personally, a person who tends to avoid discomfort at all costs, and my privilege is that I can too often do so. Only because I live in this age and this era of America can I see where avoiding the messiness of living in this world is potentially dangerous, not to mention irresponsible. So, to the year 2019, I hand this middle grade novel. In Eventown by Corey Ann Haydu, you’ll find a marvelous defense of messiness, mistakes, and uncomfortable conversations. We all want to run away from our problems, but it’s like that old phrase says: Be careful what you wish for.It happened in the past. It hurt. Now Elodee’s family is in pain. Her father, her mother, her twin sister Naomi, and Elodee herself all feel burdened by something that they can’t even talk about anymore. So when Elodee and Naomi’s mom gets a job working for the village of Eventown, they simply cannot believe their luck. Eventown’s the kind of place where you can get a fresh start. It’s where the neighbors all get together to make you a recipe box of delicious things you couldn’t burn or ruin if you tried. Where the kids in school never tease you. Where the sunsets are miraculous and the stars, if it’s at all possible, shine brighter than anywhere you’ve ever been. At first Elodee is swept up in the joy of living in such a place, but as time goes on she begins to see oddities. Why does her yard have weeds when no one else’s does? Why do the other kids act so aghast when she tries a different s’mores recipe? And why, oh why, can’t Elodee just give in to the place and be happy here? It takes a lot to live in Eventown, so what Elodee needs to determine is whether or not it’s worth it in the end.Childhood utopias automatically come outfitted with built-in weirdness. It’s part of the deal. Hogwarts had a snake in the basement. Willy Wonka’s chocolate factory had a peculiar tendency to knock off small visitors. You get the drift. These locations have a natural fantasy component that taps into a child’s ultimate desire (magic, chocolate, etc.). Less common is the idea of a perfect town. Even so, it’s there. When I was a kid I’d write short stories about a little town where I could make up all the families and characters. There was a comfort to it. Think of what Harriet M. Welch is doing in at the beginning of Harriet the Spy. And I think Haydu’s being very clever with this book because what’s truly fearful about Eventown is its seductiveness. Remember that line in the musical Into the Woods that Little Red Riding Hood sings about the wolf? “Nice is different than good.” Going to Eventown is like a crash course in nice vs. good. And the problem with nice, as a whole bunch of us know, is that it can be weaponized in the fight against truth.Reading the book I was intrigued by how the creepy elements of the tale sneak in at a glacial rate. So much so that I found myself silently chanting, “Come on other shoe … drop, man, drop. Drop, man, drop!” Drop it does, but in slow motion. Need a novel for 9-12 year olds that epitomizes the very definition of “foreshadowing”? Meet my little friend here. It knows that some of the most effective horror comes from the people we love the most. Elodee’s whole family has drunk the Eventown Kool-Aid without so much as a blink, but she doesn’t see that for a long time. Instead, she has to encounter what I consider one of the most frightening concepts of all time. Loving, patient kindness combined with insane actions, resulting in the kind of villainy I’ve never really seen in a children’s book before. The adults in this town aren’t passive aggressive so much as they’re completely dedicated to horrible inanities. Let’s put it this way: You can’t help but like a book where the foreshadowing centers around a town’s lack of library. Or, even better, the horror of what it becomes. Honestly, not since The Great Gatsby has a library been as much of a lie as the one found here. What happens to the town library will strike many kids as an unspeakable crime. It’s a very clever means of turning kids against the notion of comfort and stability at any cost.As I read, I kept finding natural connections to this book. Certainly in terms of cinema this book is pure Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind meets Pleasantville. In terms of children’s books the tie-in is Orphan Island (more on that later). I was even reminded of that moment in A Wrinkle in Time where Meg confronts It and must parse the difference between equal and the same. But when I really sat down and thought about it, the best equivalent to this, in a lot of ways, is Aldous Huxley’s, Brave New World. It might as well be Elodee saying “I'd rather be myself . . . Myself and nasty. Not somebody else, however jolly.” Or, “If one's different, one's bound to be lonely.” And, ultimately, the perfect quote for it all: “Actual happiness always looks pretty squalid in comparison with the overcompensations for misery. And, of course, stability isn't nearly so spectacular as instability. And being contented has none of the glamour of a good fight against misfortune, none of the picturesqueness of a struggle with temptation, or a fatal overthrow by passion or doubt. Happiness is never grand.” Huxley said it first, but it’s nice to have something on a younger level for the kids. Eventown is the perfect gateway drug for “Brave New World” later on.I mean, this might be an out there idea, but is it possible that this book is a metaphor for what it feels like to have depression? Elodee is constantly having to defend herself against the accusation of not trying to be happy. Her sister says, “You’re making something easy so hard.” Here’s how Elodee thinks of it instead, “There’s a grip in my heart, and Naomi’s right here but she feels a million miles away, on a whole other planet, and she gets to be there with Mom and Dad and I’m stuck here, on my weird little planet all alone. I want to explain all of that to her, but every time I try to explain what is making me feel unsettled or weird, all I do is get further and further away.” When her sister tries to cheer her up (with guilt, which in my experience always works so very very well) it says, “… I try to make Naomi grinning at me enough to make me grin too. I am trying so, so hard.” All throughout the book Elodee has to deal with a world where she feels like she’s the only one who has to try this hard. It’s a deeply lonely experience, and I couldn’t help but think of people with depression who have to deal with concerned friends and family members who say unhelpful things like, “Why don’t you just get over yourself?” and “Why don’t you want to be happy?” Like Elodee says, they try so, so hard, but often that’s not the issue. The real issue is deep and buried. In the case of this book, literally so.Again, the book that I kept thinking about the most as I read this was Orphan Island by Laurel Snyder. In both cases you have a mysterious location, otherworldly occurrences, and a girl on the cusp of teenagerhood with whom the world does not sit well. Both live in kinds of utopias. There the similarities stop, though. In Orphan Island things start to go wrong because the heroine questions the way things are, and that’s a bad thing. In Eventown things start to go wrong because the heroine questions the way things are, and that’s a good thing. In both books she dares to question the world. In only one book does that choice go well. Why do these books ring oddly true with kids? Because in the real world, adults withhold pertinent information from their children all the time. This is not necessarily a bad thing since there are many things in this world that kids just aren’t ready to know. I guess the root of it is, to a certain extent, intent. Are you keeping kids in the dark because it protects them or because it protects you?I wouldn’t think of this, any of this if it weren’t for Haydu putting it all together so well. There’s a patience to her writing. She must have had so much fun thinking up exactly how much fun to make Eventown. The different flavors of ice cream, the delicious green strawberries, the waterfalls, the gigantic blueberries, the butterfly house, the copper cooking equipment, all of it. Her book burns slow, but once things start getting weird it speeds up considerably, like weeds spreading in the night. I liked a lot of how she chose to phrase things, like when Elodee thinks of herself as, “…a tiny, cozy, ball of limbs.” Or when the dad says, “Love has a lot to do with imperfections,” which may as well be the theme of the book itself. The only part of the book that didn’t quite gel with me came at the end. I liked where the book went, but (and this is a funny thing to say) it felt too tidy. Not messy enough. There was satisfaction there, but I think it needed just a hair more of a conclusion. There’s a big discovery, words are said, words are listened to, and then we’re outta here!! The mom, especially, does a turnaround that didn’t feel real to me. I needed a little more thought there. Kids would probably not agree.Years ago there was an episode of the Radiolab podcast about a moment in history when a scientist truly believed he might have found a way to remove select memories from people’s brains. The scientist was then flooded with desperate requests from people around the world. These people were begging him to remove the pain of the past from their brains. This connects, for me, to the moment in this book when it starts to rain. When that happens, some of the neighbors go out of their way to express pure fury at Elodee’s family. It’s very much a case of them essentially saying, “Your discomfort is reminding me of my discomfort.” We want so very much to find ourselves a blank slate of some sort. No bad past, no fearful future. And kids, the age of the readers of this book, already have a sense of this. Some of this book’s readers will have encountered fearful, horrible, terrible things in their pasts. Some of them will encounter these things in their futures. And a bunch of them will look at Eventown, even with all its flaws, and want to go there in the same way that kids have wanted to go to Hogwarts for years. There is no Eventown. Not even Eventown is Eventown. I won’t tell you that’s good or bad. You’re just going to have to read this book and decide for yourself.For ages 9-12.

Remembering is important. Even when it hurts. Even when it tears you open. Our stories are what bring color, texture, light and dark, to our lives.Elodee’s family wants to forget. They want a fresh start where it doesn’t hurt and Eventown seems like the perfect place for that. There, every day is sunny, the ice cream flavors are reliable, and there’s nothing to make anyone feel bad.Elodee quickly begins to realize how much she’s losing when she gives up her stories, even the ones that hurt.Haydu‘s story is told at a slow and steady pace. It seems at first to be about a family that just needs to be a fresh start, but becomes a story about how important telling our stories and sharing our feelings is to healing and to who we are.

Eventown, by Corey Ann Haydu PDF
Eventown, by Corey Ann Haydu EPub
Eventown, by Corey Ann Haydu Doc
Eventown, by Corey Ann Haydu iBooks
Eventown, by Corey Ann Haydu rtf
Eventown, by Corey Ann Haydu Mobipocket
Eventown, by Corey Ann Haydu Kindle

Eventown, by Corey Ann Haydu PDF

Eventown, by Corey Ann Haydu PDF

Eventown, by Corey Ann Haydu PDF
Eventown, by Corey Ann Haydu PDF

0 Kommentare:

Kommentar veröffentlichen