Turtle on a Fence Post

$58.00
by June Rae Wood

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After the death of her parents and her beloved uncle, Delrita does not know how to move forward in life and feels stuck in a bad place, until a WWII veteran shares his thoughts with her and teaches her the true meaning of happiness. Grade 5-8. In The Man Who Loved Clowns (Putnam, 1992), Delrita's world was turned upside down by the death of her parents in a car accident and shortly thereafter by the loss of Punky, her beloved uncle with Down's syndrome. Now, she is beginning to reach up and out. Continuing to live with her Aunt Queenie and Uncle Bert, the young teen wonders if she will ever feel truly loved and part of a family again. In addition, Queenie's cantankerous father has moved in with them and he exasperates his daughter and intimidates Delrita. She slowly reaches out to others, especially Joey, a Down's syndrome adult living in a nursing home with his mother, and becomes his "teen buddy." It's harder to reach out to Queenie's father and to Heidi, the new girl whose family has moved into Delrita's family's old home. There is a lot going on here, including Delrita's suffering from the pangs of puppy love for a neighbor, Tree. Less believable than most of the characters, he is too good to be true. Everything is tied up in the end and the offstage solution to the local robberies plus the revealing of Heidi's secrets just pile on. In spite of having slightly too many threads, this engaging story is one of a very few that shows average kids interacting enjoyably with special-needs adults without that being the focus of the story. This novel is about coping with grief and accepting change, and those readers who became attached to Delitra in the first book will find plenty to enjoy here.?Carol A. Edwards, Minneapolis Public Library Copyright 1997 Reed Business Information, Inc. Like the turtle of the title, a grieving teenager learns that she's not going to get anywhere without help in this engrossing, energetic sequel to The Man Who Loved Clowns (1992). Still sad and angry at the deaths--all within three months--of her parents and her beloved uncle, Punky, Delrita Jensen feels more comfortable with her friends, or being a Teen Buddy to mentally retarded Joey Marcum, than with her Aunt Queenie and Uncle Bert. She can't shake the niggling doubt that Queenie considers her just another obligation to shoulder. The household becomes even more tense when Queenie's cantankerous father, Orvis, joins it. When a charming classmate moves into Delrita's old house and moves in on Delrita's heartthrob, Tree Shackleford, it is Orvis who unexpectedly gives Delrita the best advice; still hurting from his experiences in WW II, he shows her the value of sharing feelings and memories. Readers don't need to know the first book to understand this one or to appreciate just how far Delrita has come. Wood weaves in a plethora of subplots that never crowd the main story, and Joey is a well-drawn, fully participating member of the large, very active multigenerational cast. An appreciation for those who sacrifice time, effort, money, and even their lives for others infuses this memorable tale of healing. (Fiction. 11-15) -- Copyright ©1997, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.

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