Monday, 30 October 2017

Corners by Corrina Austin (Children's, 9 years +, 10E/10E)

 6th March 2018, Dancing Lemur Press, 136 pages, Paperback, Review copy 

Book summary
It’s 1969 and ten-year-old Davy is in a predicament. With two weeks remaining of the summer holidays, he’s expelled from the public pool for sneaking into the deep end and almost drowning. How will he break the news to his hard-working single mother? She’s at the diner all day, Davy has no friends, and he’s too young to stay by himself.

The answer lies in his rescuer, mysterious thirteen-year-old Ellis Wynn. Visiting her Grammy for the summer, Ellis offers to babysit Davy. She teaches him about “corners”–forgotten or neglected areas fixed up special. Together, the kids tackle several “corners” and Davy learns what it means to bring joy to others.

Davy begins to wonder, though. Why does Ellis want to be his friend? Why doesn’t she ever smile? And is Davy just one of Ellis’ “corners?”

Nayu's thoughts
This book is rather special. It's all about the healing power of friendship, someone giving you a chance, which started when Dacey got banned the swimming pool. I agree with his son in the flash forwards passages that a ban was a mega strict overreaction, but without it he'd never met Ellis who helped change the way he viewed the world. Further on in the book he daydreams about her being a mermaid, which is kind of true because she saved him from drowning, then continued helping him see positivity in his hard life, which changed not only his mother's view on life but affected other people, just like Ellis's grandmother did. 

Ellis is extremely special, with a secret of her own that gets revealed at the end of the book. Everyone needs an Ellis-her corners make a humongous difference for whoever they are intended for. I'd really like to have known a bit more about Mr Mosely as I hope the future continued getting brighter for him, thanks to what Ellis made Davey do. It must have been harder having agoraphobia in a time when mental illness wasn't as recognised as it is today. I do have a few corners of my own, and will make sure I maintain them and create new ones when the time is right. Ellis's corners definitely helped changed life for both people she knew and strangers. I hope you enjoy making a corner once you've read this sweet emotional read. 

Find out more on Corrina's website.  

Suggested read
Another good read about emotions that takes place in the past (at least I think it is...can't quite remember!) is Bigfoot, Tobin and Me by Melissa Savage (Children's, 9 years +, 10E/10E)

1 comment:

Gina said...

Yay! So glad to see this book gaining a wider audience. Had The pleasure of reading it as well and LOVED it!