The Reviews:
Kirkus:
«
Josie’s cerebral palsy has made her an outsider at school, but at home she is
one of three strong
women
with a rewarding routine. Her mother is working hard to become a landscape
designer, leaving
Gran
to keep the home and garden blossoming. Events unfold in one free-verse poem
after another
with
titles that hint at the narrative but usually work equally well at capturing one
distinctive moment
in
time. Readers gradually learn about Josie and a new-found friend, Jordan, who
sees a whole person,
not
just a disability. Gran becomes ill, Jordan tries out hanging with the in-crowd
and Mom has to
adjust
to new realities. Josie’s strength shines as she handles sadness and loss as
well as recovery and
progress. Readers living with a disability or trying to understand others seem
like the target audience,
but
Josie’s voice has a universal appeal,"
--Kirkus Reviews, starred review
Booklist:
"As
if seventh grade weren’t enough of a challenge for anyone, Josie also struggles
with cerebral palsy, social isolation, a mom she needs more time and support
from, and monster bulldozers that seem to be carving up the countryside to build
huge homes around her family’s old farmhouse. Enter new neighbor Jordan, a
sensitive kid whose geeky, science-loving ways bring a fun spirit of discovery
into Josie’s days. He melds with her and her family, especially the warm and
wise Gram, and the friends create a kind of magic as they conduct all kinds of
plant and pond experiments. Further challenges face Josie when Gram becomes ill
and Jordan goes off to camp. Then, risking her mom’s wrath, Josie secretly
ditches her hated therapy sessions; when mother and daughter eventually
reconcile, Josie emerges from her rough patch in a believable and transforming
way. Written in verse, this
quick-reading, appealing story will capture readers’ hearts with its winsome
heroine and affecting situations." --Booklist, January
School Library Journal:
"Josie, a girl with cerebral palsy, lives on the shrinking farmland owned by her
family for generations and now being sold to developers. Her mother works and
attends college and her grandmother tends her diminished patch of land. The
story is told in the seventh-grader’s voice in a series of free-verse poems.
She is
a bright and wry narrator, acutely aware of her limitations and her strengths.
When
Jordan, wealthy but neglected by his widowed father, moves into a mansion behind
her farmhouse, they discover a common love of nature and science, and Josie
finally has a real friend. She and her grandmother are both passionate about
plants and gardening, and Zimmer does a nice job integrating botanical images
throughout the novel. Josie feels like a “dandelion in a purple petunia patch”
and thinks, “I must be a real disappointment–/stunted foliage,/no yield.”
Through growing maturity and Granny’s wisdom, she gains confidence in herself.
Reaching for Sun will have wide appeal for readers of diverse ability. Reluctant
readers will be attracted to the seeming simplicity of the text, with short
chapters and lots of white space on the page. They may not even realize that
they are reading poetry. More
sophisticated readers will find added enjoyment as they begin to appreciate the
poetic structure and imagery. Readers of all levels will enjoy spending time
with Josie and may gain an increased awareness of what it’s like to live with a
disability."
–School
Library Journal, March
The
Horn Book:
"Garden imagery wends its way through
this eloquent free verse novel about a seventh-grade girl with cerebral palsy.
Josie compares the sound of her voice to how ugly poppies look -- "hairy,
grayish, saw-toothed foliage" -- before they bloom. The regal blossoms that
finally emerge are a "prize for patience," and, similarly, she vows that "if I
take all that trouble / to say something, / I promise / to try / to make it
worth / the wait, too." But no one at her school bothers to see beyond her
disability until a boy named Jordan, a guileless, hyperintelligent science nerd,
moves into her neighborhood and marvels at her plant knowledge. While the
portrayal of friendship between misfits is nothing new, Zimmer infuses Josie's
story with distinctive auxiliary characters, such as Josie's resilient
grandmother, who made the difficult decision to sell off most of her family farm
in order to pay her daughter's college tuition and granddaughter's medical
bills. Josie, her mother, and her grandmother live together on the small patch
of land left, surrounded by housing developments, but maintaining a kind of
oasis where, whatever hardships arise, they can still tend to their garden and
to each other." --Horn Book
"It's actually the type of book that you would want to read over and over again, and is truly inspiring."
-Tehreem Rehman, YA Teen Reviewer, South Huntington Public Library
"This will definitely be on my Best Books of 2007 list. " - Little Willow's Blog: February 19th is Reaching for Sun day there!