An Unusual Book- Corps of the Bare-Boned Plane

November 12th, 2007

Once again, I am on the selection committee for next year’s Snow Willow awards. I just finished reading one of the strangest books I’ve ever read and needed to comment on it somewhere. Polly Horvath, award-winning Canadian author has written a book that bewilders me. I loved her Everything on a Waffle, which won a Newbery Honor. I haven’t read anything else, but am aware that several of her books have won multiple awards. Her books are quirky with unusual characters, but in The Corps of the Bare-Boned Plane, my question would be, who is going to read this? Told from multiple points of view, which I love, immediately makes this book less accesible to a number of students. One of my good readers told me that the flashbacks in After were confusing for her. Although The Corps is a very clever book, with many eccentric characters all trying to come to terms with grief in their own way, I was at times hard-pressed to continue reading. It just all seemed too unbelievable, and yet not fantasy. Then at the end, all the loose ends were very quickly woven together, and even the normally taciturn uncle spills his heart suddenly. My question to you, Polly Horvath, is,” Who were you writing this book for?” We tell our students to understand who their audience is. If this is for young people, which ones will read and enjoy it? I actually find it difficult to write this because I hold authors in such esteem and you are certainly a very capable author. I am going to read The Canning Season and The Vacation and see if I can make some sense of this for myself.

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One Response to “An Unusual Book- Corps of the Bare-Boned Plane”

  1.   Stephanie on November 15, 2007 6:48 pm

    I remember not liking Everything on a Waffle much but it was years ago now and I can’t remember why. So I probably won’t try another by Polly. I agree with the question “Who the heck is your audience?” It’s like those books that look like easys and have too, too many words on a page. What’s that? My question always is “Could this be read before bed?” Otherwise it’s not an easy to me.

    Jane, I must commend you on your responses to others. I went through to try to do my share of comments and you are everywhere. Shows how generous you are with your time.

    S

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    I Love Kids’ Books
    I have the privilege of being a teacher-librarian in 2 elementary schools. That means I have the best of all worlds; I teach and work with children from Kindergarten through grade 8; my job encompasses the management of the libraries as well as developing the collections. And my homework? Reading and more reading! What more could a life-long bookworm ask for? The point of this blog is mainly for my own use- to make myself some notes about some of the many books I read- to prompt my failing memory, to use as the basis for book-talks or newsletter inserts and to provide information for others that may be interested. These will not be formal or lengthy- but just some of my thoughts.
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