CHILD DEVELOPMENT, NEW GRANDPARENTS, INSPIRATIONS, FUN & GAMES, KIDS AUTHOR OF THE WEEK
By Jim Whiting
The best in children's literature, selected by 
Eerdmans Books for Young Readers, March 2004
Young adult (12 and up) novel
217 pages, $8.00
Gr. 7-12. It's going to be the perfect senior year. Leah has
made the regional Olympic Development Team and is a sure recruit for the best
women's college soccer programs in the country. Then she learns that her
ever-present,
always-upbeat father has pancreatic cancer and only a few months
to live. Soccer, friends, school, and even the college coaches' calls gradually
cease to be important; her family's tight circle of love and care endures.
Swanson paints a compassionate and authentic portrait of a
teen facing a parent's death without sugarcoating the painful dying process or
a family's struggle to cope. From the initial denial, through the anger at a
life and routine disrupted, to the strength and support of a loving family in crisis,
each chapter, each character rings true. Without being sensational or maudlin,
Swanson's novel is real: it's deeply sad and often painful to read, but ultimately hopeful and uplifting. Frances Bradburn
From School Library
Journal
Grade 7 Up-Leah Weiczynkowski is a promising soccer player
with Olympic aspirations. The summer before senior year, she learns that her
beloved father has pancreatic cancer and only three months to live. Called
"obsessed with soccer" by her mom, Leah isn't interested in parties,
shopping, or hanging out with friends, and she regards Clay, an attentive male
classmate, as a soccer trainer, not a boyfriend. She practices her sport intently
and awaits phone calls from college coaches eager to recruit her.
Her father's inexorable decline, including the arrival of hospice workers and a hospital bed in the sunroom, is portrayed with realism and pathos. With his death, Leah comes to recognize that soccer is just a game, that her relationship with Clay is important, and that what really matters is to make a difference in the world.
This powerful novel leaves the outcome undefined, but there
is no doubt that Leah has grown inestimably in her understanding of the value
of relationships, in her ability to accept and grieve her father's death, and
in her resolve to move ahead with living. A first-rate debut.-Susan W.
APPEAL TO GRANDPARENTS
Grandparents would be interested in this book because it deals with issues and concepts that become increasingly more important to a person as they age; coping with the illness of a family member who is close to you (in this case cancer), faith, dying with dignity and grace, dealing with the death of a parent.
As a person gets older, they want to be able to have discussions with younger family members and share what they consider to be important, but this can often be awkward to do verbally and the grandparent might feel that what they have to say wouldn't be received well coming from someone kids often perceive as old-fashioned or out-of-touch. Handing a grandchild a book set in the contemporary world and geared especially toward their age can be an easier way to communicate and is more enjoyable for the grandchild as well.
Grandparents and children who are
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