From School Library Journal
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Gr 8 Up-An epic tale about grief, loss, and reconciliation.
The Dunbar brood has fended for itself ever since their mother
died from cancer and their her abandoned them. The five young
men lead practically lawless lives in a ramshackle house filled
to the brim with dirty dishes and stray animals. Their haphazard
existence is interrupted by the return of their estranged her,
who hopes to build a stone bridge with the help of his offspring.
Clay is the only sibling who agrees to help. This hefty tome
jumps across multiple time lines, from their mother's escape from
Eastern Europe to her heartbreaking illness and from the her's
abandonment to the present day, in which the eldest brother
Matthew, now in his 30s, is their story on an old
typewriter. Heavily influenced by the Homeric poems that the
family enjoys, the plot is teeming with metaphors and episodic
feats. Clay, the focus of the novel, takes on a mythic sheen in
Matthew's recounting that will remind YA fans of Jerry Spinelli's
Maniac Magee or Craig Silvey's Jasper Jones. The narrative
becomes unwieldy in places because of the evocative prose, and
sometimes the family saga is overpowered by various subplots.
Even though bits of humor and one-liners leaven the work, the
testosterone-infused dialogue may turn off some teens. VERDICT
Give this to strong readers who enjoy weighty coming-of-age
novels that blur the line between young adult and adult
fiction.-Shelley M. Diaz, School Library Journalα(c) Copyright
2011. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media
Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
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Review
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“This book is a stunner. Devastating, demanding and deeply
moving, Bridge of Clay unspools like a kind of magic act in
reverse, with feats of narrative legerdemain concealed by
misdirection that all make sense only when the elements of the
trick are finally laid out.” —Wall Street Journal
"Markus Zusak crafts an unforgettable saga." —US Weekly
"In a complex narrative that leaps through time and place and
across oceans, Zusak paints a vivid portrait of the brothers
trying to regain their balance by keeping their family’s story
alive." —Time
“It blew me away.” —Jodi Picoult, bestselling author of A Spark
of Light and Small Great Things
“A captivating book with a mighty, fearless heart, BRIDGE OF CLAY
is filled with characters to believe in and care about ...
achingly moving, delightfully funny, and thoroughly uplifting.”
—M. L. Stedman, bestselling author of The Light Between Oceans
“If The Book Thief was a novel that allowed Death to steal the
show . . . [its] brilliantly illuminated follow-up is
affirmatively full of life.” —The Guardian
“Warm and heartfelt. . . . This is a tale of love, art and
redemption; rowdy and joyous, with flashes of wit and in,
and ultimately moving.” Times of London
"With heft and historical , Zusak creates a sensitively
rendered tale of loss, grief, and guilt’s manifestations."
—Publishers Weekly, starred review
"[A] gorgeously written novel." —Booklist, starred review
Praise for The Book Thief by Markus Zusak:
#1 NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER
WINNER OF THE NATIONAL JEWISH BOOK AWARD
MORE THAN 16 MILLION COPIES SOLD
"Brilliant and hugely ambitious." --The New York Times Book
Review
"Deserves a place on the shelf with the Diary of Anne Frank . . .
Poised to become a classic." --USA Today
"Absorbing and searing." --Washington Post
"Zusak's novel is a major achievement." –People
"Zusak doesn't sugarcoat anything, but he makes his ostensibly
gloomy subject bearable the same way Kurt Vonnegut did
in Slaughterhouse-Five: with grim, darkly consoling humor." –Time
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