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Getting Near to Baby

AUTHOR: Audrey Couloumbis
ISBN: 0698118928

SHORT DESCRIPTION: After Baby dies, Willa Jo and Little Sister are sent to live with Aunt Patty while their mother goes off on her own to cope with the loss, yet Willa Jo has pain too and only wishes she could be with her mother during these difficult times. A...

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Family Emotions & Feelings
         Editorial Review

Getting Near to Baby
- Book Review,
by Audrey Couloumbis


From Publishers Weekly
"Couloumbis deftly constructs an intricate montage of thoughts and memories from the perspective of 12-year-old Willa Jo Dean who, with Little Sister, mourns the death of their baby sister," said PW in a starred review. Ages 10-14. (Aug.)nCopyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.


From School Library Journal
Grade 6-8-A touching examination of grief and healing, of the affects of a tragedy on a family, and of loss and acceptance. Willa Jo Dean, one week shy of her 13th birthday, crawls onto the roof of Aunt Patty's house to watch the sunrise. Little Sister follows her, as always. Much to Aunt Patty's chagrin, the sisters stay on the roof, ignoring her pleas and threats to come down. The novel encompasses one day's sunrise to sunset. In a series of flashbacks, Willa Jo tells of the death of Baby from drinking tainted water at a carnival, of their mother's blaming herself and incapacitating grief, and of Little Sister's refusal to talk. The girls have been taken to their aunt's house, where they have spent an uncomfortable three weeks, missing their mother, their baby sister, and being at odds with the well-intentioned yet bossy and humorless Aunt Patty. By day's end, the girls are reunited with their mother, reconciled with their aunt, and realize that death is not to be feared, that life is short, and that love brings healing. Couloumbis's writing is strong; she captures wonderfully the Southern voices of her characters and conveys with great depth powerful emotions. Indeed, this is a book about feelings and relationships, and the reverent tone and child-focused attempts to understand the unknowable ring true in a deeply satisfying manner. While the lack of action as well as the nonchronological flashbacks may prove a challenge for some youngsters, this is a compelling novel that will speak to special readers.Connie Tyrrell Burns, Mahoney Middle School, South Portland, ME Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.


From Library Journal
Grade 6-8-When their baby sibling dies, two sisters are sent to stay with their domineering Aunt Patty. A poignant and uplifting novel told from a child's wise and down-to-earth perspective. (Oct.) Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.


From AudioFile
In her first novel and Newbery Honor Book, Audrey Coloumbis transports the listener into the fragile world of two sisters recovering from the death of their youngest sister. On the extended visit to well-meaning Aunt Patty's house, Willa Jo confides her thoughts about the events of the tragedy and the power of families to heal . Mischa Barton's narration comes from the heart and has the tenderness of a story that is close to the heart. Her voice can be delicate and tentative as Willa Jo reflects on her mother's paintings or Baby's illness, and it can be firm and full of resolve as Willa Jo protects Little Sister from taunts or stands up to Aunt Patty. Barton's overall gentleness lets Willa Jo's sorrow, tenacity, and peace resonate lastingly. A.R. © AudioFile 2001, Portland, Maine-- Copyright © AudioFile, Portland, Maine


From Booklist
When their baby sister dies and their mother slips into a depression, 12-year-old Willa Jo and Little Sister are taken to live with their mother's older sister. Aunt Patty is a take-charge kind of person--good-hearted but bossy. It doesn't take long for Willa Jo, herself an older sister, to get fed up her with her aunt's ideas of what's good for her nieces. That's not why the girls wind up out on the roof, but it may be why they refuse to come back into the house. Don't ask Little Sister for the answer, though; she stopped talking when Baby died. No amount of cajoling will force her to speak, but Willa Jo is eloquent enough for both. Set in North Carolina, the story is told in Willa Jo's distinctly Southern voice, a treat to hear but sometimes too adult to believe. The characters are credible, though, engaging and multidimensional. So is their grief and the ways they deal with it so they can, once again, get "near to Baby." Couloumbis' first novel wears its heart on one sleeve and its humor on the other. Together, they make a splendid fit. Michael Cart


From Kirkus Reviews
Couloumbis's debut carries a family through early stages of grief with grace, sensitivity, and a healthy dose of laughter. In the wake of Baby's sudden death, the three Deans remaining put up no resistance when Aunt Patty swoops in to take away 12-year-old Willa Jo and suddenly, stubbornly mute JoAnn, called ``Little Sister,'' in the misguided belief that their mother needs time alone. Well-meaning but far too accustomed to getting her way, Aunt Patty buys the children unwanted new clothes, enrolls them in a Bible day camp for one disastrous day, and even tries to line up friends for them. While politely tolerating her hovering, the two inseparable sisters find their own path, hooking up with a fearless, wonderfully plainspoken teenaged neighbor and her dirt-loving brothers, then, acting on an obscure but ultimately healing impulse, climbing out onto the roof to get a bit closer to Heaven, and Baby. Willa Jo tells the tale in a nonlinear, back-and-forth fashion that not only prepares readers emotionally for her heartrending account of Baby's death, but also artfully illuminates each character's depths and foibles; the loving relationship between Patty and her wiser husband Hob is just as complex and clearly drawn as that of Willa Jo and Little Sister. Lightening the tone by poking gentle fun at Patty and some of her small-town neighbors, the author creates a cast founded on likable, real-seeming people who grow and change in response to tragedy. (Fiction. 11-13) -- Copyright ©1999, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.


Review
"A touching examination of grief and healing, of the effects of a tragedy on a family, and of loss and acceptance.  Couloumbis' writing is strong: she captures wonderfully the Southern voices of her characters and conveys with great depth powerful emotions."-School Library Journal, starred review

"...the combined strength of this unforgettable cast of characters leaves a lasting and uplifting impression."-Publishers Weekly, starred review

"Coloumbis' first novel wears its heart on its sleeve and its humor on the other.  Together, they make a splendid fit."-Boolist


Book Description
After their baby sister dies, Willa Jo and Little Sister's family falls apart. Their mother sinks deep into an unshakable depression, so the two older girls are sent to live with their strict Aunt Patty and her husband. Since Little Sister refuses to talk, Willa Jo has to try and make things right in their new home, but she can't stop missing her mother or the life the four of them had before Baby died. Aunt Patty is trying as hard as she can, but she doesn't really understand what Willa Jo and Little Sister are trying to deal with-until the morning the two girls climb up to the roof of her house, and stay there. Audrey Couloumbis's masterful debut novel brings to mind Karen Hesse, Katherine Paterson, and Betsy Byars's The Summer of the Swans-it is a story you will never forget.


Card catalog description
Although thirteen-year-old Willa Jo and her Aunt Patty seem to be constantly at odds, staying with her and Uncle Hob helps Willa Jo and her younger sister come to terms with the death of their family's baby.


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         Book Review

Getting Near to Baby
- Book Reviews,
by Audrey Couloumbis

Getting Near to Baby

ANNOTATION

Although thirteen-year-old Willa Jo and her Aunt Patty seem to be constantly at odds, staying with her and Uncle Hob helps Willa Jo and her younger sister come to terms with the death of their family's baby.

FROM THE PUBLISHER

Willa Joe is up on the roof at Aunt Patty's house. She went up to see the
sunrise, and Little Sister followed her, like she always does. But by
mid-morning, Willa Jo is still up on that roof, and she knows it wasn't just
the sunrise that brought her there. Audrey Couloumbis has perfectly
captured the pervasive feelings that can take hold when tragedy strikes—and
the slow, subtle revelations that come when one can finally get near to the
source.


FROM THE CRITICS

Publishers Weekly

In her first novel for children, Couloumbis deftly constructs an intricate montage of thoughts and memories from the perspective of 12-year-old Willa Jo Dean who, with Little Sister, mourns the death of their baby sister. As the story opens, Willa Jo and Little Sister are sitting on the roof, ignoring their Aunt Patty's orders to come down. Over the course of a single day, Willa Jo, from her high perch, mulls over the events of the past few weeks: her mother's depression, Little Sister's refusal to talk and Aunt Patty's efforts to make things right by taking the girls into her home. But Aunt Patty and her nieces don't see things the same way. Willa Jo and Little Sister would rather play with the children across the street (dirty "mole rats," in Aunt Patty's opinion) than attend Bible School or associate with the socially acceptable daughters of Aunt Patty's friends. The tension rises until Uncle Hob, in his soft-spoken way, forms a bridge of understanding that unites them all. Willa Jo's narrative, with its subtle cadences of a Southern drawl, achieves a child's sense of the timelessness of long summer days stretching before her. Coloumbis infuses the heroine's voice with an elegiac quality, even as the child's humor and determination to keep up Little Sister's spirits shine through. The tale of this one day on the roof chronicles the changes in the other three characters as much as the changes in Willa Jo, and the combined strength of this unforgettable cast of characters leaves a lasting and uplifting impression. Ages 10-up. (Sept.) Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.

Children's Literature

There is a tension right at the beginning of Getting Near to Baby. On the surface, two nieces can't communicate with their appearance-oriented Aunt Patty. Little Sister doesn't speak at all and Willa Jo can't make herself understood. The underlying problem is the death of their infant sister and the separation from their mother caused by this forceful aunt. The story is sometimes funny, sometimes heartbreaking; all is told with strong images that relate the small events that have large feelings behind them. Mischa Barton's soft reading seems an appropriate interpretation of how the girls struggle quietly with their grief. The Raleigh setting and Southern voice emphasized by the reader lend a gentleness to this story of healing. There are two cassettes, unabridged. 2001, Listening Library, 2 cassettes, $22.00. Ages 8 up. Reviewer: Susie Wilde

VOYA

Getting Near to Baby is best described as limp. Although dealing with the death of a young child is an important subject, Couloumbis manages to make it horrifically boring. I found the characters difficult to relate to and unrealistic, and could not imagine anybody I know acting like them. The writing is fairly good but runofthemill. I would not recommend this novel. VOYA CODES: 3Q 3P M J (Readable without serious defects; Will appeal with pushing; Middle School, defined as grades 6 to 8; Junior High, defined as grades 7 to 9). 1999, Putnam's, Ages 12 to 15, 224p, $17.99. Reviewer: Erin Hutchinson, Teen Reviewer

Library Journal

Gr 6-8-When their baby sibling dies, two sisters are sent to stay with their domineering Aunt Patty. A poignant and uplifting novel told from a child's wise and down-to-earth perspective. (Oct.) Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.

School Library Journal

Gr 5-8-Audrey Couloumbis' first children's novel (Putnam, 1999) is an exquisitely-crafted story of loss, family love, and new beginnings, with a generous dollop of down-home humor. While their mother is trying to cope with the death of their baby sister, 13-year-old Willa Jo and eight-year-old Little Sister are spending a few weeks with Aunt Patty and Uncle Hob. Everyone is trying to be cooperative and supportive, but Aunt Patty and Willa Jo are often at odds over matters such the girls' playmates and how to deal with Little Sister's grief-induced silence. Everything comes to a head when the girls climb onto the roof to watch the sunrise and remain there throughout the day. Uncle Hob's understanding, Aunt Patty's genuine concern, and Willa Jo's reflections on her feelings turn a potential crisis into a growth experience for all of them. Mischa Barton's soft Carolina cadence conveys the emotional and the ironic moments of the book with grace and power. Sound quality is good, and the cassettes and case are well marked. This is an exceptional recording of an exceptional book that offers meaningful insights on some universal truths about grief and healing.-Barbara Wysocki, Cora J. Belden Library, Rocky Hill, CT Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information. Read all 7 "From The Critics" >


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