Source of book: Audiobook from the library.
We listened to Rebecca Stead’s 2010 Newbery Award winner, When You Reach Me,
which was quite good. This book, interestingly, shares some themes - and also
incidents from the author’s life.
I think it is safe to say that Rebecca Stead didn’t
particularly enjoy junior high. She seems to have been bullied, as both of her
books we read have had bullying as central themes, and in both cases, she has
said that they reflect her own experiences at that age. Friendship was both
important to her, and a lifesaver, and this too carries over into her
stories.
Liar & Spy is told from the perspective of
Georges. (The “s” is silent - he is named after Georges Seurat, the pointillist
painter who Georges’ family dubs “Sir Ott.”) After his dad is laid off, the
family has to downsize from a house to an apartment. Fortunately, it is only a
few blocks away, so he can stay at the same school. To make ends meet, his mom
works long hours at the local hospital, while his dad tries to get a business
off the ground. This leaves Georges alone for a lot of the day.
The wheels of the plot are set in motion as they move in to
the apartment. When Georges and his dad take some garbage down to the basement,
they see a sign on a utility room door which says, “Spy Club Meeting—TODAY!”
Georges is skeptical, because the sign seems old, but his dad writes below it,
“When?” Georges follows the response, and ends up meeting a kid his age, Safer,
who is part of a rather unusual hippie family living in the building. Safer and
his little sister, Candy (the older brother is Pigeon - the parents named them
after their personalities emerged…) inform him that another resident, “Mr. X,”
might be a murderer, because he always dresses in black, and carries suitcases
in and out.
The book tells of the investigation (such as it is), and the
friendship that develops between Safer and Georges. Meanwhile, Georges is
dealing with bullying at school, which none of the adults seems to take quite
seriously.
As with the former book, this one is, shall we say, quirky.
The characters are both believable and...unexpected might be the right word.
Safer’s whole family is amusing yet very much like some people I have known.
They homeschool their kids. Well, they “unschool” their kids. Which means that
the learning is a bit spotty, but hands on, and just different. Also, like many
unschoolers I have met, they have at least one kid with serious anxiety issues.
How this interacts with the sheltered lifestyle is debatable, but there is a
correlation at least. But, they are definitely nice, decent people, and their
quirks are endearing.
The concept of the spy club was apparently borrowed in some
part from E. L. Konigsburg’s book, Jennifer, Hecate, Macbeth, and Me. We
haven’t read that one yet, although we have enjoyed other books by the author.
Two incidents appear to have been taken from Stead’s own
childhood. She modeled Georges’ friendship with Safer after her own
relationship with a beloved best friend. Apparently, this friendship was the
one bright spot during those years, and she felt it got her though the bullying
she endured, as well as the difficulty of finding one’s place during the
transitional grades. To quote the author, talking about this issue and how she
wrote the book:
"I feel like there are stages in many, many people’s
childhoods when you don’t have one good friend like [I had]. It can happen a
lot in sixth and seventh grade because that’s when things are changing so
quickly. It’s like a desperate dash for some kind of acceptable identity, and
it can get ugly."
On a related note, there IS enough money in the world to
convince me to repeat my high school years. There is NOT enough money in the
world to convince me to repeat my junior high years. No freaking way.
The second was the test for the ability to taste PTC, given in
science class. Stead was one of only two students who couldn’t taste the
chemical. The other was a boy she had a crush on. So she invented the “G Test”
for the book based on that.
Just some fun bits from the book, which has a lot of them. I
haven’t even mentioned the side characters, like “Robert who Draws,” or the
owner of the local Chinese food joint, who makes his own fortune cookies with
bizarre and cryptic fortunes. Or the use of the “interrupting cow” joke that my
kids loved when they were a certain age.
Fun, quirky, focused on friendships. Not a bad way to
describe Stead’s writing. This book is worth a read.
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