I’ve rarely seen an author who explores characters’ emotions as well as Cynthia Voigt. I keep meaning to seek out new books by her, but for now, I’m rereading my way through the Tillerman Cycle. I’ve reviewed my favorite before, A Solitary Blue (technically #3 but largely stand-alone) and today I’m looking at 1 and 2.
Homecoming begins when Liza Tillerman leaves her children in a mall parking lot, telling the three younger ones to mind Dicey, the oldest at 13. They wait in their car overnight, but when their mother doesn’t return, Dicey decides they must walk some sixty miles to find an aunt, the only relative they know of.
This is the most plot-focused book in the series, a kind of modern (well, 1980s) quest through New England. Dicey must be scrappy and resourceful to keep her family safe and fed, picking up loose change or odd jobs, and camping in parks or on beaches. Voigt brings a great deal of detail and realism to the journey, exploring how each new obstacle can be overcome. The challenges are real–a few times they run out of money and can’t eat, there’s at least one stranger intending them harm–but this doesn’t become a traumatic story. It’s about survival and perseverance. Continue reading “Book Review(s): Homecoming and Dicey’s Song”
After I finished
I ran across Stitching Snow by R. C. Lewis when it was suggested at one my book club meetings (and described as “Snow White meets Star Wars”–which means I’m having a Snow White-themed week on the blog…) This book wasn’t picked for our monthly read, but I decided to read it anyway. Because: fairy tale retelling! It wasn’t quite Star Wars…but it might be “Snow White meets
I really, really, really want to read Winter, the final book in Marissa Meyer’s Lunar Chronicles Quartet. But it won’t be out until November. So in the meantime, it was some consolation to read the prequel, Fairest, providing the backstory of the terrifying Lunar Queen, Levana (and, incidentally, Winter’s stepmother).