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Sticks and stones by beth goobie
Sticks and stones by beth goobie













When she accidentally gets hold of Sister Mary’s master keys, will she stay in one of the first safe places she has known, or flee? Kelly, newly arrived at Marymound School for Girls, wants nothing except to run away, from this place with the high fences and wire enforced glass windows, from her past, from her life. The only way the book could have been improved would be to include a few resources in a brief appendix: perhaps that will come in the Soundings teacher’s guide that I am sure is forthcoming. To accomplish this in such a limited space - only 105 pages - and at such accessible reading level - 2.8 - is astounding.Ĭhildren need to see titles such as these in library collections, because some of them may be living an existence close to this work of fiction. Goobie excels at tightly written novels that subtly reveal plot and character through perfectly chosen, perfectly placed detail.

sticks and stones by beth goobie

In traditional YA novel form, the book ends with the character’s new beginning. The Canadian equivalent of DDS intervenes to save the girl, who finally recognizes she IS worth saving and IS worth something. Luckily, a friend and neighbor come to the rescue when the dad finally puts her into a hospital after a severe beating: because the telephone rang while he was with a real estate client. Her alcoholic, co-dependent mother does nothing to intercede, and a teacher makes an attempt that is brushed aside.

sticks and stones by beth goobie

Convinced there is something wrong with her, 15-year-old Sophie accepts his frequent and brutal beatings as her due, thinking that her unpredictable father loves her enough to discipline her so she can learn. ISBN 978-1551433479 $7.95įor fans of Dave Pelzer’s A Child Called It (HCI, 1995) comes this heartbreaking and haunting story about a girl whose spirit and self esteem are broken by a Jekyll/Hyde father.















Sticks and stones by beth goobie