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Blister

door Susan Shreve

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When a family tragedy occurs, ten-year-old Alyssa "Blister" Reed changes schools, moves to an apartment with her depressed mother while her father gets his own place, and tries to believe her grandmother, who tells her she is "elastic" and can handle it all.
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Kids have to deal with a lot of things in their lives that they have no control over. Some of these things they understand and some they only partially understand, while others may be completely beyond their grasp. In Susan Shreve's novel, Blister, tween main character Alyssa is faced with all of the above and has to muster the resilience to make it through.

The book opens with the stillborn birth of Alyssa Reed's little sister. This loss cracks open the already fragile state of her family's life together with her mother plunging into deep depression and her father moving out (and moving on with someone else). Having to start a new school on top of the loss of the baby and her parents' separation is a lot for any one fifth grader to handle. Renaming herself Blister, she decides she's going to do things her way from now on, including stealing clothes, makeup, and jewelry from her father's girlfriend in the hopes of breaking them up, trying out for the cheerleading squad, even if it is just a popularity contest, and generally taking advantage of the neglect of her parents. She's also going to create a new persona in school. Luckily Blister has her grandmother to lean on when she really needs to and to explain in an age appropriate way the things that Blister just doesn't completely understand.

There were so many issues here, grief, depression, a mental health crisis, divorce, infidelity, cliques, neglect, and more, that it felt like a sort of pile on even though Blister didn't realize the extent of the everything. She also came across as rather precocious and unrealistic for an up to now fairly sheltered ten year old. She shows her resilience and elasticity in the end but even that felt sad on top of so much other sadness along the way. I'm uncertain if I'd hand this to kids Blister's age, not because the issues are tough but because the nuances make it more mature. Tweens probably won't recognize that baby Lila Rose was supposed to save the Reed's faltering marriage nor the depth of the neglect Blister experiences from both of her parents (her mother because of her deep depression and her father because of his affair) but that doesn't make this tale of a young girl trying to find herself in the midst of such terrible tragedy and sadness any less troubling. ( )
  whitreidtan | Sep 10, 2021 |
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  lcslibrarian | Aug 13, 2020 |
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  lcslibrarian | Aug 13, 2020 |
Shreve sure packs a punch in her short books about tween kids. ?áShe doesn't waste time with exposition or explication of inner lives, she keeps the focus on the kid and so we don't understand more about the adults than what they share with the kid, and yet there's a lot hinted at, a lot of stuff that could be discussed.

I'd love to discuss this with kids. ?áDo they think it was wrong for Alyssa to steal Tamara's things? ?á(probably) ?áWould they cut Alyssa some slack, given what she's dealing with? ?á(I don't know...)

Do they understand why cheerleading is such a big deal in fifth grade, and why it's a popularity contest? ?áAssuming they don't think it should be, do they have suggestions for reform, esp. given that the teachers and staff are in on the scheme?

Note the different covers between this and Under the Watsons' Porch. ?áThis is cartoony, pink, simple; the other is subtle, almost somber, photo w/no ppl. ?áI think publishers aren't sure how to market Shreve's juveniles. ?áThe kids get in trouble, in more trouble than I did when I was a teen, but still they are kids and, ultimately, it's manageable kid-sized trouble. ?áThe books dance on the edge of being noticed by righteous community censors, but I don't think they cross anyone's line. ?áI will continue to look for more by Shreve. ( )
  Cheryl_in_CC_NV | Jun 6, 2016 |
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When a family tragedy occurs, ten-year-old Alyssa "Blister" Reed changes schools, moves to an apartment with her depressed mother while her father gets his own place, and tries to believe her grandmother, who tells her she is "elastic" and can handle it all.

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