Monday, June 30, 2014

Fortune Cookie

Fortune Cookie
By: Josi S. Kilpack

A letter from San Francisco.  A burned body. An estranged sister.  And lot’s of secrets.  Mix them all together for two minutes and you have a recipe for a murder mystery you won’t want to miss! 

Summary
Sadie is busy putting the final touches to her wedding, which is only three weeks away, when she gets a letter in the mail from San Francisco.  The only person she knows there is her estranged sister, Wendy, who didn’t even come to their father’s funeral.  Sadie is hesitant about letting Wendy back into her life… until she realizes Wendy isn’t around to hurt her anymore.  Plus there’s a mystery that needs solving, and new food to be eaten.  Sadie soon uncovers twisted truths about her sister’s past, and meets people who definitely have a motive for murder. 

The Depth of a Relationship
I think more than anything Fortune Cookie explores the relationships. 
Ji and his family:  Ji does things out of duty and not so much because he loves what he does.  He works hard to honor his father-in-law and to provide a comfortable living for his daughters.  He married Lin Yang out of duty, never growing to love her.  Sadie helps Ji begin to see the reality of his miserable his life, and that it will continue to be miserable if he continues to do everything he does out of duty.
Ji and Sadie: Meeting a nephew you never knew you had.  That’s a surprise, especially when you find out your nephew lived a completely different life than you, and much of it because of the bad parenting of your sister (his mother).  Ji doesn’t have to accept Sadie into his life, and Sadie knows that.  In fact several times it appears as if Ji is pushing Sadie away.  This relationship hangs by a thread throughout the book, and Sadie must fight for it to stay together.
Pete and Sadie:  Revisiting San Francisco brings back a lot of hard memories for Pete.  It was a favorite vacation spot for him and his late wife, Pat.  Sadie and Pete not only have to work together to solve this mystery, but also to keep their relationship alive and well.  Pete must come to terms with Pat never coming back, and instead, having Sadie by his side for the rest of his life. 
I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again, I love how these mystery books are more about relationships than they are about the mysteries.

A Personal Investment
There has been one other book in the Sadie Hoffmiller series where one of Sadie’s family members has been deeply involved in a case.  This caused Sadie to put everything she had into solving the mystery.  Fortune Cookie has the same personal investment involved.  This time the family member is the one who is dead, not the one being accused.  Because of this Sadie puts more of an effort into solving the mystery.

Personal Review
This book is one of the best books in the series, not because it’s a page turner, but because of what Sadie learns about herself and her relationships with those around her living and dead.  I love Sadie’s strength and love she has for others.  Before I thought Sadie was a little selfish in her relationship with Pete.  Fortune Cookie brought the unselfish side out in Sadie.



Saturday, June 7, 2014

Escape to Terabithia

Being ten years old can’t be too hard.  Most of your life revolves around play, chores, and school.  But being ten can still have it’s difficulties: bullies, annoying teachers, not fitting in, secret loves, secret hobbies, and fears you’re ashamed to admit.  You would need a Terabithia—an imaginary, or physical, place where you can be yourself, leaving the worries of the world behind. Bridge to Terabithia by Katherine Paterson, not only explores the adventures and lives of two 10 year olds, but also shows how each of us has our own Terabithia.  Terabithia represents something different for each child; for Leslie it was a place of refuge, for Jess it was a place to grow.
It was Leslie’s idea to create a place where she and Jess could be themselves.  In fighting off giants, invaders, and paying respect to the spirits of Terabithia, Leslie finds refuge from the school kid’s teasing.  She was a dreamer and made fun of for it. She day dreamed in class (Paterson 44), she read books and recounted the stories to Jess, her hobby was scuba diving, not “watching game shows on TV” or “reading Good Books” like all the other girls (Paterson 33).  It was only in Terabithia that Leslie was truly able to let her imagination and freedom loose, allowing her true self to show.
For Jess, Terabithia was a place where he faced his fears.  As a boy, Jess thought he was supposed to be tough, not some wussy who was afraid of a swollen creek, getting beat in a race, or of the woods.  By facing his fears in Terabithia he grows and becomes a leader.  Perhaps the biggest fear that Jess faced was going to Terabithia without Leslie.  “Jess tried going to Terabithia alone, but it was no good.  It needed Leslie to make the magic.  He was afraid he would destroy everything by trying to force the magic on his own . . . (Paterson 65).  But in the end it is the very magic of Terabithia he feared wouldn’t come to him should he go to Terabithia alone, that ultimately destroyed his fear.  After Leslie’s death, Jess enters Terabithia alone.  At first he struggles to find the magic, telling the spirit of Leslie that he’s “just a dumb dodo” (Paterson 119), and in honor of, the deceased queen.  The spirits, he said, accepted his offering, and the words he spoke “had the ring of the sacred grove in them (Paterson 120). He alone produced the magic he feared he couldn’t create.
In a way Jess feared Terabithia.  He didn’t quite grasp the magic the way Leslie did.  He wasn’t the one to come up with the idea to make the pine forest sacred, or fight off the invaders of Terabithia.  Leslie was the one who always told stories to Jess.  Jess was a follower and listener.  When Leslie died Jess could have abandoned Terabithia, thinking that it wasn’t magical without Leslie.  Instead, Jess became the ruler.  He crowned his younger sister, May Belle, Queen of Terabithia, bringing his own magic into Terabithia (Paterson 128).
Each of us has a Terabithia where we can escape from the world to be our true selves, or a place where we go that allows us to conquer our fears.  It may not be a physical place, it may be a situation, an event, or it could take place inside our own heads.  Nevertheless, Terabithia will always make us grow, and will always be our safe haven.
~
“Between the two of them they owned the world and no enemy, Gary Fulcher, Wanda Kay Moore, Jancie Avery, Jess’s own fears and insufficiencies, nor any of the foes whom Leslie imagined attacking Terabithia, could ever really defeat them.” (Paterson 40).

Works Cited
Paterson, Katherine. Bridge to Terabithia. New York: HaperCollins, 1977. Print