And the first runner up is... When Dara Cohen was little, she was a bright, shiny star. She was the cutest seven-year-old who ever sang Ella Fitzgerald, and it was no wonder she was crowned Little... This description may be from another edition of this product.
I wish there were more novels like SECRETS OF TRUTH & BEAUTY
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 15 years ago
Dara Cohen had felt the sting of being overweight for a long time, and almost everyone seems to hold it against her. So as a senior, when asked to pick a topic for her school autobiography project, Dara decides to put herself on display in a bold show of protest against society's misplaced standards of beauty. But the project only brings Dara heartache, her parents dramatizing her motives and pulling her from class. Feeling embarrassed and rejected, Dara opts to visit her estranged sister at the Jezebel Goat Farm in Hollis, Massachussetts. Life on the farm becomes a cooperative experience for Dara that encourages true bonds of family and discovery of her own self worth. The Jezebel Goat Farm is like no place Dara has ever known. It's a kind of refuge where people can just be. And it isn't the kind of place where anyone comments negatively about weight or the meals one eats, which are delectable. The atmosphere is completely different from that of Dara's home, with a quiet kind of freedom and an expectation for everyone to pitch in. Dara's sister, Rachel, is calm, friendly, welcoming and mostly silent. Dara doesn't know her at all because Rachel and her parents haven't spoken in years; they have said that Rachel is a terrible person, capable of dreadful things. But Dara finds that Rachel isn't at all what she expected and an understatement to everything Dara has known in her life with her parents. Rachel is accepting, poor and content. She is also an excellent cook and the head of the whole cheese-making business of the farm. And she is a lesbian. The other farmhands are people of all ages, most of them gay or lesbian. One of the most inviting and friendly of the bunch is Owen, a gorgeous senior whose family rejected him when he announced that he was gay, so he now lives full-time at Jezebel Farm. Dara works daily with Owen, getting up at the crack of dawn to look after and milk the goats to make cheese. Dara and Owen have a lot in common and become friends in no time. Dara's experiences at the farm are truly life-changing and help her find herself. She feels a quiet solace in working there, and being on her own brings out the best in her. She will have to face her parents again and all the others who judge her for her weight, but after being with people who have also faced the same pressures, Dara feels that she is strong enough and can finally belong somewhere. She will find a way to prove her worth, and Owen, Rachel and the others at the farm will help her. Megan Frazer's brilliantly written debut novel delves into some very difficult experiences teens go through growing up. The statements made here about prejudice and accepting others are universal and important. The story is organic and stirring, and life on the Jezebel Goat Farm is significant. Dara and Owen are characters like so many young adults today, and this is the kind of book that can really make a difference for anyone struggling to find themselves. I wish there were more novel
a MUST READ
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 15 years ago
This book is a must read. I agree with the other reviewer who said that it's refreshing to read a story about the magic that is possible in the every day, rather than the constant stream of magicians and vampires and so on. This book is beautifully written and extremely complex, challenging rather than pandering or condescending to the young adult reader. A perfect gift for any young reader you know.
Truth & Beauty contains both
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 15 years ago
I went into this expecting a typical coming of age tale centered around a girl who needed to lose weight (a la Fat Glenda) according to what society told her. What I ended up getting was a much richer analysis of family, friends, and goat cheese. Dara begins the book by creating a multimedia project for school that is misinterpreted to a degree and sends her mostly upper class life spiraling and forces her to look more closely at her situation within her family, her group of friends, and herself. Her decisions lead her to a farm that makes goat cheese and contains another young person, who, like Dara, fled an unhappy family situation. Dara finds herself making friends and alternating letting go with reeling in until she finally begins to understand herself and who she is. This is a really great feel-good book, you will not be disappointed!
Buy This Book
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 15 years ago
A quiet, graceful book of love and self-discovery. I loved the gentle beauty in every page; it's a perfect book for any teen who is- or who feels- abandoned by their family. You *can* create your own family, because family are the people who love you as you are- as this book beautifully demonstrates.
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