Paper HeartAges: 8 and up Pages: 116 List Price: $16.95 Cover: Hardcover Published: 10/1/2006 ISBN: 1-932425-61-6 ISBN-13: 978-1-932425-61-1 |
On cold days Nadia isn't allowed to play outside at recess with the other sixth-graders. She can't bring a friend home after school unless they promise to sit quietly playing cards. Mama reminds her again and again, she's not like other kids--her heart can't take the strain. When her teacher announces that the class will put on a play, Nadia is excited--at last something she can do! It will change everything: she will be Nadia the amazing actress, not Nadia the sick kid. Maybe it will even convince Mama to drop her plans to home-school her. But Nadia doesn't get a part in the play. When she learns that her mother asked the teacher to keep her from participating, she beings digging around for answers. Just exactly what is wrong with her heart? In the process of searching for the truth, Nadia finds the inner strength to get help for herself and Mama. Awards
Reviews"This short, plainly written, but intense novel gives readers an immediate connection to Nadia's fears and dreams. ..." "Arrington creates an intriguing plot that has a touch of mystery and suspense. ...Renders the eternal battle between parental desire for protectiveness and a child's desire for liberty in particularly urgent terms. It's especially believable and poignant that Nadia has absorbed her mother's conviction, taking every flush of disappointment or speeding heartbeat of anger as an episode of illness. Though things wrap up a bit speedily at the end, the concept remains intriguing and the telling intense, so readers will easily sympathize with Nadia's plight even as they begin to wonder about their own parental restrictions." "As a story for middle-grade readers, this puts a relatively positive spin on a disturbing subject: the kind of parental mental illness that sees and nurtures ill health in a perfectly normal child. ...Useful as part of a library collection in the same way other books about child abuse are useful—to alert some children that not all is ordinary or okay in their own home—the book also provides the kind of horrified fascination other stories about illness have for some young readers who will see what's really happening long before Nadia and the adults in her life do." |

