The Summer of the Swans
by Betsy Byars


The author of After the Goat Man, The House of Wings, Trouble River, and The Cybil War won the Newbery Medal for this book in 1971. It doesn't actually tell about the whole summer. It all happens in two days' time.

But in those two days you learn a lot about what ails Sara Godfrey. Mainly, it seems (though the book never comes right out and says it) that she is suffering from puberty. But she thinks it's because her nose is crooked, her feet are big, and her orange sneakers make her look like Donald Duck; and she knows that looks matter, no matter what everyone says about other things being more important.

Sara has other things on her mind as well. Discontent brews within her, fueled by envy of her beautiful older sister; the coarseness of her Aunt Willie, who has raised them since their mother died; the disinterest of her father who works in another state; and (she guiltily admits to herself) how she chafes against the constraints of caring for her 10-year-old, brain-damaged brother, Charlie.

Though he is sometimes a nuisance, Sara cares about him. One thing she can never forgive is anyone hurting or making sport of Charlie, and when she thinks a boy in her neighborhood has done just this, she can never get enough revenge on him.

But then comes the day when everyone gets up in the morning and Charlie isn't there. He has wandered away in the night, preoccupied with looking at the swans his sister showed him yesterday. He gets lost in the woods, confused, scared, helpless. Suddenly nothing matters more to Sara than finding him--even her grudge against Joe Melby.

In one simple, brief incident in the life of a fourteen-year-old girl, Betsy Byars creates both a small-town neighborhood that seems real, and a whole world of complex emotions swirling through a girl's veins. It's hard to say which is the more impressive achievement. Not only that, but the misadventure of little Charlie is apt to leave you breathless with fear and concern. Finding him really does make a lot of difference, not only for him but for his confused and self-conscious sister, their aunt, the boy down the street, even the whole neighborhood. Add the enigmatic beauty of swans, the goodness and not-so-goodness of regular people, and the pains of growing up, and you get a book that makes you want to seek out other books by the same author.

Robbie Fischer
Arizona USA

Recommended Age: 12+

10/12/04

If you would like to contact Robbie, you may do so here.


 
The new Alohomora! and Academia Podcasts on iTunes:

 

Love them
They are OK
Haven't listened yet but I will
They don't really interest me

 

March 8, 2005 - Half-Blood Prince cover released for American, UK Children, and UK Adult version.
 
 

Please login to participate in MuggleNet's Daily Trivia Competition!

Think my name's funny, do you? No need to ask who you are. My father told me all the Weasleys have red hair, freckles and more children than they can afford.

Draco Malfoy
Sorcerer's Stone
J.K. Rowling once thought of writing the Death Eaters as the Knights of Walpurgis.
 
 
HP Exhibition opens in Singapore
June 2, 2012


Ascendio 2012
July 12-15, 2012


LeakyCon 2012
August 9-12, 2012


The Casual Vacancy
September 27, 2012

Username :
Password :
 Sign Up
 Forgot Password ?
 
 
 
April Fool's Day 2012   GilderoyVDay   Happy Holidays 2011   Pottermore: Slytherin  
Pottermore: Hufflepuff   Pottermore: Ravenclaw   Pottermore: Gryffindor   Quidditch World Cup  
Halloween 2011   DHnagini   DHelderwand   DH2cast  
DH1Trio   DH Voldemort   DH_Trio   Deathly Hallows - Hermione  
Burning Hogwarts   Wizarding World   Draco   Half-Blood Prince Trio  
Harry   Hermione   LEGO Harry Potter  
 
 
  Twitter   Facebook   RSS   Tumblr