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A Tribute to Karen Cushman!

 






The Loud Silence of Francine Green



From School Library Journal
Starred Review. Grade 5-9--Cushman creates another introspective female character who is planted firmly in her time and who grows in courage, self-awareness, and conviction. This novel follows Francine's eighth-grade year, from August 1949 to June 1950, at All Saints School for Girls in Los Angeles, a year of changes largely inspired by a new transfer student, Sophie Bowman. While Francine is quiet and committed to staying out of trouble, happy to daydream of Hollywood movie stars and to follow her father's advice not to get involved in controversy, Sophie questions authority and wants to make a difference. Her questioning of the nuns' disparaging comments about the Godless communists frequently leads to her being punished and eventually to her expulsion from school. Francine begins to examine her own values, particularly when an actor friend of Sophie's father is blacklisted and Mr. Bowman loses his scriptwriting job. At the novel's end, Francine is poised to stand up to Sister Basil, the bullying principal, and exercise her freedom of speech. Cushman captures the era well, with references that range from Dragnet to duck and cover drills in schools and her father's aborted attempt to build a bomb shelter in their backyard. Francine Green is reminiscent of Jamie Morse, another 13-year-old and the protagonist of Ellen Levine's Catch a Tiger by the Toe (Viking, 2005), who is also coming of age in the shadow of McCarthyism and the beginnings of the Cold War. Readers will relate to the pervasive fear of the period as it resonates in our post-9/11 world.--Connie Tyrrell Burns, Mahoney Middle School, South Portland, ME Copyright (c) Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From AudioFile
Francine is in eighth grade at a rigid Catholic school from August 1949 through June 1950. Sophia, a transfer student from public school, becomes her best friend. Sophia is full of opinions, and not afraid to voice them. Good historical fiction breathes life into an era by peopling it with realistic characters living on history's stage. Cushman is a master at creating introspective female characters that middle school girls can admire. In Anaka Shockley's portrayal of Francine, the listener hears her voice grow and strengthen as the shadow of McCarthyism grows darker. Shockley uses cadence and slang to place us firmly in a specific historical period while depicting young people whom today's youth can recognize. N.E.M. (c) AudioFile 2007, Portland, Maine-- Copyright (c) AudioFile, Portland, Maine --This text refers to the Audio CD edition.

Other favorites include...

         Catherine, Called Birdy (Clarion, 1994)         
         Matlilda Bone (Clarion, 2000)
         The Ballad of Lucy Whipple (Houghtin MIfflin, 1996)
         Rodzina (Clarion, 2003)
         The Midwife's Apprentice




More About Karen Cushman...

Karen Cushman Education Place Interview
Karen Cushman Author Spotlight Page from Clarion
HarperCollins Biographical page
HarperCollins Teaching Guides
LEARNING ABOUT Karen Cushman page
Internet Public Library Karen Cushman page
ALA 1996 Newbery Award page
Educational Paperback Association Autobiography from Karen Cushman

 
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A The Loud Silence of Francine Green Website.