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Virginia Hamilton : Bluish (sig)
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Author: Virginia Hamilton
Title: Bluish (sig)
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Published in: English
Binding: Paperback
Pages: 128
Date: 2002-06-01
ISBN: 0439367867
Publisher: Blue Sky Press
Latest: 2024/09/06
Weight: 0.2 pounds
Size: 5.24 x 7.6 x 0.35 inches
Edition: Reprint
Amazon prices:
$0.01used
$1.99new
$5.99Amazon
Previous givers: 3 eunice (USA: CA), Amanda (USA: AL), andilit (USA: VA)
Previous moochers: 3 Kola TwoHearts (USA: ME), Tracy (USA: DE), Jeannie (USA: WA)
Description: Product Description
In this powerful novel researched in NYC schools, Newbery Medalist Virginia Hamilton documents the struggle young people face as they simultaneously assert their independence and yearn for guidance.

Friendship isn't always easy. Natalie is different from the other girls in Dreenie's fifth-grade class. She comes to school in a wheelchair, always wearing a knitted hat. The kids call her "Bluish" because her skin is tinted blue from chemotherapy. Dreenie is fascinated by Bluish -- and a little scared of her, too. She watches Bluish and writes her observations in her journal. Slowly, the two girls become good friends. But Dreenie still struggles with with Bluish's illness. Bluish is weak and frail, but she also wants to be independent and respected. How do you act around a girl like that?


Amazon.com Review
Bluish is unlike any girl 10-year-old Dreenie has ever seen. At school she sits in a wheelchair, her skin so pale it's almost blue. Dreenie, herself new to the New York City magnet school, is fascinated by her, but wary as well. Unaware that the name Bluish could have derogatory connotations ("Blewish," for Black and Jewish), she fixates on the moonlight blue skin tones of this curiously fragile child. Together with Tuli, a bi-racial girl who pretends to be Spanish (often with poignantly comical results), the three carefully forge a bond of friendship, stumbling often as they confront issues of illness, ethnicity, culture, need, and hope.

This novel has an edgy quality that may disconcert some readers until they find the rhythm. Bouncing back and forth between Dreenie's first person journal entries and a third person narrative, the motion is a little unsettling. The overall theme is powerful, however, and Virginia Hamilton's skill in addressing the intense and subtle nuances of female friendships is impressive. No surprise, there; with over 30 books for young readers under her belt, and an armful of honors including the Newbery Medal for M.C. Higgins, the Great, three Newbery Honor Awards, the National Book Award, and many more, Hamilton is a formidable voice in children's literature. (Ages 9 to 12) --Emilie Coulter

URL: http://bookmooch.com/0439367867
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