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Mass Market Paperback Johnny Kellock Died Today Book

ISBN: 0006395341

ISBN13: 9780006395348

Johnny Kellock Died Today

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Format: Mass Market Paperback

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Book Overview

It's a long, hot Halifax summer in 1959 and twelve-year-old R osalie N orman has aguilty secret. Her no-nonsense, authoritarian mother has broken her ankle--and it'sall R osalie's fault. But news that... This description may be from another edition of this product.

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Children's Children's Books

Customer Reviews

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Reviewed by Janelle Martin

Rosalie Norman is facing the summer of 1959 as if she was being sentenced to boredom. Her best friend is away and she is stuck socializing with the boy next door, a strange young man called "the Gravedigger" by the local children due to his job at the local cemetary. Her carelessness with her drawing pencils causes Rosalie's mother to fall and fracture her ankle and as a result, the Gravedigger is recruited to help the family out with chores. This forced connection is not one that Rosalie wants, fearing the backlash from fellow students when returning to school in the fall. Johnny Kellock Died Today is centred around Rosalie's hunt for the titular character, her favourite cousin Johnny, whose disappearance her family is hiding. Hadley Dyer's first novel pulls from memory the long, hot summers of childhood. Rosalie is the youngest child in a family of grownups, the afterthought baby whose place is never quite certain. Her mother is a true matriarch, ruling the family with the authority of a field general - while her father, the nurturer and comforter, is called only by his surname. In this family of shifting tensions and dynamics, Rosalie appears to be at sea. Dyer has written a character that lives so much in her mind, and the comics she draws, that she does not appear at all connected to her family. This is exemplified by the fact that she has no knowledge of her father's first name, in fact wondering to herself at that poignant moment "How is it even halfway possible I didn't think about this before?" As the Gravedigger becomes David, Rosalie learns more about herself and her family's secrets than she ever thought possible. Her household make-up changes yet again and Rosalie is able to finally become one of the adults rather than the afterthought child. This is a delightful story told in Rosalie's distinctive voice, wonderfully evoked by Dyer. This reader's only complaint is that the sub-plot of Martha, Rosalie's sister, is not more satisfactorily concluded. The reader is left hanging, wondering what has driven her solitary wanderings and tension. This engaging novel is sure to become the perfect read for a hot summer day, read on the porch with a glass of lemonade.
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