Glen HuserRecensioni
Autore di Stitches
13 opere 235 membri 10 recensioni
Recensioni
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fountainoverflows | Feb 7, 2023 | This is a story of two friends, Travis and Chantelle, who try to navigate tough school and home lives and use their passions for theater and creating puppets. Travis' passion makes him a target for the school bullies, but he eventually has the opportunity to attend an art school where he is accepted and understood for who he is. This book resonates with many issues young adults may face with feeling accepted, finding their passion, and coping with bullying.
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kelseymccaw | 3 altre recensioni | Dec 17, 2017 | On the one hand, I automatically love this book for being LGBT middle grade. (And Canadian, too! That's three of my favourite things at once.) On the other hand, I didn't connect with this book as much as I would have liked. One of the reasons I read middle grade books is because of the strong voice that they are often narrated in, and I felt that was missing here.
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bucketofrhymes | 3 altre recensioni | Dec 13, 2017 | This was a quick read. The plot formula is a tad familiar. What can two tough individuals, separated by a huge generational divide of 75 years, learn from each other? The road trip they embark upon is a bit fanciful - Tamara has virtually no experience driving a car and yet seems to manage the insane traffic of Greater Vancouver with only a couple of minor mishaps - and "lessons learned" doesn't seem to be high on either Tamara or Miss Barclay's agendas but I did enjoy the local setting of a road trip from Edmonton, Alberta to Seattle Washington and Vancouver, BC. It is obvious that the author is a fan of Charles Dickens' works and Wagner's operas, in particular Wagner's Ring Cycle. Huser manages to incorporate both of these into the story. Great Expectations is the book Tamara is reading as part of her Language Arts class at school so it isn't surprising for references to that story to abound here, with Tamara referring to Miss Barclay as "My own private Miss Havisham." and Miss Barclay reading various Dickens stories as a way to deal with her age-related insomnia.
Overall, one of those books one reads for the anticipated character personality clashes, the adventure of the road trip and for me, the bonus of familiar local settings.½
Overall, one of those books one reads for the anticipated character personality clashes, the adventure of the road trip and for me, the bonus of familiar local settings.½
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lkernagh | 2 altre recensioni | May 21, 2017 | Tamara is a prickly teen who's been kicked out of foster homes. Jean Barclay is 89 and feisty, despite being sidelined by a hip replacement. The two meet when Tamara's high school class has a project at the senior home. Their hardheaded natures become collaborative assets as they plan a cross-Canada trip to pursue their dreams. This story of intergenerational friendship is light, funny and poignant. Although Tamara's and Miss Barclay's characters didn't seem deeply drawn to me, I enjoyed the development of their often prickly relationship.
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Salsabrarian | 2 altre recensioni | Feb 2, 2016 | I didn't like this book all that much. It did not have a lot of depth to it and I felt like the situations were unrealistic and farfetched.
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kali.joy | 3 altre recensioni | Dec 5, 2015 | Not scary, just good, creepy Halloween fun for readers new to chapter books.
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Sullywriter | May 22, 2015 | Another great, poignant Huser read!
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peonygoat | 2 altre recensioni | Apr 26, 2007 | I loved this book. Barbara Stanwyck Kobleimer and her sister Olivia de Havilland live in a neglectful household. Cosmo Farber, a gentle clown, becomes a positive force in their lives.
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peonygoat | Oct 13, 2006 | Set in small town Alberta, the main character Travis likes sewing and is good friends with Chantelle. They create puppet shows, but are bullied by classmates because of their differences.
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peonygoat | 3 altre recensioni | Oct 13, 2006 | Questo sito utilizza i cookies per fornire i nostri servizi, per migliorare le prestazioni, per analisi, e (per gli utenti che accedono senza fare login) per la pubblicità. Usando LibraryThing confermi di aver letto e capito le nostre condizioni di servizio e la politica sulla privacy. Il tuo uso del sito e dei servizi è soggetto a tali politiche e condizioni.
Huser’s novel for older children and young adults focuses on Canada’s World War I internment of enemy aliens from the Austro-Hungarian Empire, most of them Ukrainian Canadians. The author brings this shameful piece of Canadian history to life through the story of two orphaned brothers, Alex and Marco Kaminsky. His telling is enriched with Slavic and Ukrainian folksongs and tales, art and music. As the book opens, Alex, who’s about 14, is living with his uncle; his older brother, Marco, has gone off to work as a farmhand on the Granger farm in Vegreville, Alberta. He is expected to return in December.
Uncle Andrew is known to love his moonshine. Drinking heavily late into the night, he knocks over a kerosene lamp and sets his farmhouse ablaze. Alex, awakened in the loft by the smoke, tries unsuccessfully to save his uncle, only to have his own hands and face badly burned. He’s rescued by neighbours and taken to the home of a local rural nurse. Once sufficiently recovered, he is determined to find Marco, who mysteriously and uncharacteristically did not return to Uncle Andrew’s farm when he said he would.
Huser’s novel details Alex’s quest to find his brother. Young, penniless, and not yet fluent in English, Alex is helped along the way by a postmaster/shopkeeper and a Norwegian carpenter, as well as a sensitive schoolteacher and the moneyed aunt who raised him. It turns out that a confrontation with the farmer who cheated him of his wages was enough to have Marco arrested, detained, and used as slave labour in an internment camp in Banff, Alberta. Conditions are brutal for men imprisoned there. Many become ill and die. Some try to escape: a few are successful; others are tracked down or shot.
While Alex’s determination to find his brother is rewarded, the story is ultimately one of great sadness.
Huser manages to communicate a great deal about conditions in rural Alberta during the second decade of the twentieth century. Canada was then a rigidly WASPish place; bigotry towards Eastern Europeans was rampant and intense. Through Stella’s story, Huser also manages to give young readers a sense of immigrant women’s difficult lot—their lack of agency and access to education, poverty, and, once married, their endless pregnancies. (I know this fairly intimately, as my Ukrainian-Canadian grandmother was one of these women.)
I’ve read two other of Huser’s novels for young people and know him to be a sensitive and skillful writer. In this story, I believe he attempted to counterbalance the distrust and prejudice of many Anglo-Canadians towards immigrants by having his likeable main character assisted by people with great generosity of spirit, but I was not convinced that this would have been the way things were for a boy in Alex’s shoes. Given the sadness of the story, however, I understand that decision in a novel for young people.½