In the rush and crush to get that hot ARC or the newest title, sometimes we get to sit back and capture what might be considered an "older" title (2006 is really not that old. . .and as we say in the reading business--at least in my circle of friends and influence--it's new to somebody)and today I was able to capture one of these in Susan Taylor Brown's HUGGING THE ROCK.
I don't remember how or when I was able to make a connection with Susan Taylor Brown, but I admire her gentle spirit and her advocacy for poetry communicated through her tweets and social media activity.
So, when I looked through her site and found HUGGING THE ROCK, I knew I would have to go and check out this title. You see--when my own mother abandoned me in the back of her car to go into a bar and drink, my grandmother (my mother's mother) called my father telling him that he needed to come and pick me up--that her daughter was ill-equipped to take care of a young child. I was three.
So a book about a father who comes and a father who stays is appealing to me on a personal level. What Susan Taylor Brown creates in HUGGING THE ROCK is deeply personal and deeply moving. There are stand-out pieces within the book that truly make a novel in verse work. One in particular--celebrating a natural day that would occur in the course of a year--is so brilliant in its understatement that it is difficult not to share it with you here.
In the moment of her leaving, Rachel's mother tells her to hold on to her father, who she describes as a "rock":
Mom says he's a rock
the good kind you an always count on
to do the right thing.
It's hard for me to think of a rock
as something good.
Some rocks are heavy
and make you sink.
Some rocks are too big to move.
And some rocks are sharp
and cut you
if you try to hold them in your hand (32).
Susan Taylor Brown creates the kind of goodbye seen that make us all check that lump in our throats and that little bit of wetness in our eyes reserved for books like BIGGER THAN A BREADBOX and films like HOPE FLOATS. Look at what Susan Taylor Brown does on page thirty-three, in a piece called "Good-bye", appearing on the facing page to the piece wherein Rachel was contemplating the quality of rocks:
I realize that mom is a rock too,
the kind that crumbles if you hold on too tight.
HUGGING THE ROCK, a 2006 title from poet Susan Taylor Brown, finds itself in a league of strongly-written novels in verse placing the book in good company with the likes of Sonja Sones, but even more timely, the season is a good one for going back to get this book as we prepare for the release of Amber Turner McRee's SWAY (May 2012).
HUGGING THE ROCK presents a scenario not often found in middle grade or young adult literature wherein the father stays and makes it work when the mother leaves. Susan Taylor Brown does not gloss over this or make it seem that it is the toughness and resolve of a man that makes Rachel's father stay.
In fact, what we find in Rachel's father is something more of a sedimentary--or sentimental--rock formation, layered in the need to respond, the need to rescue, and the need to resolve.
HUGGING THE ROCK addresses issues of mental illness which puts the book into ladders with other titles addressing the same.
More celebration of Susan Taylor Brown's HUGGING THE ROCK include the presence of caring teachers, counselors, and supports in place to help Rachel navigate the loss. The markers of time woven into the book help the reader to follow Rachel through a year of loss, a year of learning, and a year of loving.