Black Hole Radio - Bilaluna by Ann Birdgenaw
Headline: A Big Little Book
At first, I thought, “Oh no. I’m stuck in a YA book, and this will be so boring.” But, just like the story itself, I was soon sucked into a wormhole through space and time, and my foreboding disappeared. Suddenly, I was nine years old again, feeling like I was reading a Hardy Boys mystery, and remembering those youthful, wonderfully awkward, and confusing, feelings of attraction to a girl, while Identifying with Hawk, who seems like such a cool and together kid, the very essence of what I was not at that age but wanted to be.
Then I looked around and realized I had been transported to another planet, surrounded by alien creatures, not knowing if I would be safe. This lent a satisfying tension to the story. All the while I was being taught things, learning without realizing it. This planet was facing similar environmental challenges to our own and in wonderfully accessible story form I was discovering the importance of pollination, the critical role of insects in replenishing the soil, the benefits of clean hydroelectric power, an application of Einstein’s theory of relativity and about what a light year is, just to name a few.
I was also learning about bullying, about how not to treat others, and about how to accept and embrace people who are different from me, rather than automatically rejecting them. I was also brought into the experience of persons with Asperger’s syndrome, seeing nthrough their eyes, feeling through their skin, now recognizing such experiences as different from mine, but not better or worse than me.
When I returned to Earth, days in space time but only minutes in Earth time, I wrote this review, and it came so easily. Isn’t it interesting, the reviews of good books generally do go easily because they inspire. This book, only 79 pages long, was of that elk, a Great Big Little Book filled with marvelous values and wonderful lessons that I would want my children have. I highly recommend Black Hole Radio - Bilaluna and give special kudos to Ann Birdgenaw for adding kindness and compassion to a world that often sorely lacks both. Both young and old can benefit from considering her message.