"When I was ten years old, everything was just right--for a while. I mean it, things were almost perfect." Two years later, things are not so perfect for Kara. Her father has moved out and her mother's mental illness has worsened. Kara believes that as long as no one (including her father) finds out about her mother's condition, everything will be all right. School is more and more difficult, as Kara struggles to pretend she's normal--a "real person." Retreating to the Lonely Island of her imagination, based on her favorite book, Island of the Blue Dolphins , is one of Kara's only ways to cope with this tremendous burden. In spite of her fear of discovery, it's only when she's finally forced to relinquish control of the situation that Kara can stop pretending and truly become real again. Sally Warner's first-person narrative captures the vivid agony of living with (and loving) someone with a debilitating mental illness. Readers will be startled to come to the end of the novel and realize the entire drama has unfolded in just one day (with revealing flashbacks to chronicle life leading up to this particular Thursday). Warner's sixth-grade narrator, who has enough to worry about just getting through her adolescent years, seems almost numb with fear. Kara's poignant, desperate efforts to control her life by making lists of how to behave at home and at school are portrayed with eloquence and great sensitivity. (Ages 10 to 14) --Emilie Coulter
Sally Warner is a writer of fiction for children and young adults and of books on creativity. She made the Lily series and Emma series for children's books. Sally Warner was born in New York City and grew up in Connecticut and California, where her family moved when she was eight years old.
lo leí por primera vez hace más de diez años, obligada por el cole, y ahora lo he vuelto a leer, por voluntad propia. ni cagando entendí la profundidad del libro ni el tema de salud mental a los ocho años (btw: profesora, por qué este libro a los ochoo????????), pero algo me habrá quedado que me hizo querer releerlo. ahora soy capaz de empatizar con kara, la protagonista. me hace querer abrazarla por haber soportado (y por tanto tiempo que mierda) una carga que no era suya, de verdad que es muy fuerte
tmb me pregunto si mi profesora se imaginará que alguno de los 8 niños a los que obligó e insistió tanto en leer este libro, estaría años después descubriendo que en realidad sí es una muy buena lectura (tqm mi profe)
Kara is 12 years old. Her father left two months ago and her mother is clinically depressed and her condition has been worsening significantly since her father moved out. Kara has seen her mother ride the wave that is clinically-diagnosed depression her whole life. She is convinced if she can just hold things together until her mom hits the "upswing" again, they'll be okay. She is afraid that if someone outside the house finds out her mother is on the downside of the spectrum then everything will fall apart.
Of course, for Kara, it already feels like everything is falling apart. She loves her mother and yet resents feeling the need to take care of her. She loves her father, but is furious with him for leaving her and her mother in this situation. She is feeling like she's watching herself walk and talk without actually being connected to herself in a way that would make her feel REAL--like everyone else.
The majority of the narrative happens over the course of a single day. In the day we see the machinations Kara goes through to keep the secret that her security, her very sense of self is crumbling. Kara's desperation and longing radiate from the pages and, to the author's credit, everything does not suddenly "get better" when her father, a teacher and a friend do intervene in her circumstances. I particularly like Kara's insights into her own behavior when she is able to step away and look at it. Her observations about how her own behavior became somewhat irrational when in the midst of such a hugely unreasonable situation are an important piece of her ability to look forward with hope and confidence in herself and her own reality.
Este libro nos habla de la crisis existencial que vive una niña de 11 años. Me ha gustado el libro porque, de alguna manera, entiendo los comportamientos de este personaje.
En este libro se puede ver claramente varios de los comportamientos errados de siempre en el ser humano, por ejemplo: la escotosis (mentira existencial) del personaje principal, esta niña también mentía mucho, manipulaba. Por otro lado, resulta interesante ver cómo muchos de sus comportamientos errados tienen, en el fondo, un fin bueno; aun así me parece ideal que buscar ayuda se muestra como la verdadera solución a los problemas, al contrario de la autosuficiencia.
Este libro nos puede ayudar a identificar ciertos malos hábitos que tenemos cuando nos aproximamos a otras personas, por ejemplo: mentir. Muchas veces con el afán de dar una imagen de que todo está bien terminamos haciéndonos daño, permitiendo que el "qué pensarán" gobierne nuestra voluntad.
Este libro es muy corto, incluso tiene muchas imágenes; pero la trama es tan buena que no puedes dejar de leer. Lo recomiendo.
Though the cover illustration makes her look older, this is the story of a 6th grader, so most secondary readers wouldn’t really consider it. The girl’s parents are split by the dad’s employment several hundred miles away. The mother is mentally ill, and the girl must deal with the illness, as well as her own attempts to have friends, and survive. I didn’t read the middle of this, but it seemed safe. Positive ending
Picked up the book during an ill-timed storm. Read it in about 6 hours with liberal breaks throughout. Not sure how I feel about the book, it was a super easy read and I really liked Kara. I always find books on mental illness to be an important part of the literary field, I am just not certain Warner developed that portion and the guilt Kara felt related to it well enough for her audience.
Aunque lo parezca (por el nombre) NO es un libro de autoayuda. No me sorprende que el libro no tenga ninguna calificación de una estrella, ya que es realmente bueno.