Budget- Expense Tracker,Bill Reminder,Debt Manager
Finance and Business
App
Have been on the TOP-1 category in 58 countries such as America, Japan, Russia, Canada, Italy and...
Tabata Stopwatch Pro - Tabata Timer and HIIT Timer
Health & Fitness and Sports
App
Tabata Stopwatch Pro is the ultimate Tabata Interval Timer that works for 'all' your interval...
Sleep Watch by Bodymatter
Health & Fitness
App
Track sleep with your Apple Watch automatically. No buttons to press. Just wear your Watch to bed...
Nitro Nation Online
Games and Sports
App
For those who live life 1/4 mile at a time, Nitro Nation is the most addictive drag racing game! ...
Budget~ Expense Tracker,Bill Reminder,Debt Manager
Finance
App
Have been on the TOP-1 category in 58 countries such as America, Japan, Russia, Canada, Italy and...
Sweat: Kayla Itsines Fitness
Health & Fitness and Lifestyle
App
Sweat with the Kayla Itsines BBG Program and join the world’s biggest female fitness community and...
Tabata Stopwatch Pro - Tabata Timer
Health & Fitness and Sports
App
Tabata Stopwatch Pro is the ultimate Tabata Interval Timer that works for 'all' your interval...
MediBang Paint for iPad
Entertainment and Utilities
App
Over 1000 brushes and tones! This app has everything you need to make art MediBang Paint is the...
My Dictionary Pro
Education and Entertainment
App
Do you want to learn a foreign language quickly? A unique program for memorizing words will help you...
Hazel (1853 KP) rated A Library of Lemons in Books
Dec 17, 2018
A Library of Lemons</i> is the most recent novel by children’s author Jo Cotterill. It is a moving story about a child’s perception of a life heavily affected by loss and grief, and the impact a positive friendship can bring. Calypso is only ten years old but has the reading age of someone much older. In fact she loves books so much that she prefers them to interacting with other people. Since her mother’s death five years previously, Calypso’s father has distanced himself from the world, focusing on writing and reading in his study, and has encouraged his only daughter to do the same: “be your own best friend.” However, a new girl at school causes Calypso to question and change the way she views the world.
Despite never having had a friend at school, Calypso quickly develops a strong friendship with Mae who also has a passion for reading. The difference is Mae lets herself feel emotion and is happy to let other people into her life, a concept that is initially alien to Calypso. As time goes on Calypso realizes she is the happiest she has ever been and that Mae has filled a gap she did not know was there. Regrettably, her newfound contentment is shattered on discovering that something is wrong with her father, and that he has developed an unhealthy obsession with lemons…
From the very beginning the reader is shown how difficult Calypso’s life is. She often comes home to a cold, dark house where she has to fix herself her own dinner from a very limited supply of food. Yet until Calypso meets Mae, she does not realize that there is anything wrong with this. Once Calypso learns that her father is suffering with depression – something that older readers will already have guessed – she sees how unfair life is for her and notices that she is very different from other children her age. This is a heartbreaking situation for readers to imagine, but Calypso’s strength as a young carer is admirable – similarly to characters in some of her favourite books, such as<i> Anne of Green Gables</i>.
There are so many well-known novels referenced in <i>A Library of Lemons</i>, which emphasizes Calypso’s love of literature. Although Cotterill has included children’s classics amongst these titles, it is doubtful that young readers will be familiar with them all. This poses the problem that certain allusions to characters or storylines will be lost, however if the youngsters are just as passionate about reading as Calypso is, they may be inspired to seek out these famous works.
I was initially drawn to <i>A Library of Lemons</i> because I had loved Cotterill’s previous novel, <i>Looking at the Stars</i>. I was not aware at first that this novel tackled mental illness – which was not a problem as I often read books of that genre – but I was expecting something powerful and moving. And that is what I got. I much preferred <i>Looking at the Stars</i>, which I thought was a lot more emotional and shocking – a refugee camp in a third world country – however <i>A Library of Lemons</i> is still a beautiful story with deep and quotable prose.
Before I finish this review I would like to praise Cotterill for the way she dealt with the taboo subject of mental illness. Often illnesses of this nature are either glamourized or stigmatized, neither of which occurred in this novel. Cotterill’s portrayal of depression and its affects on both sufferer and child are extremely realistic. The way that the book ends is also true-to-life. There is no happy ever after, no amazing cure – but there is hope, a glimpse of recovery and a better future.
Although Calypso is ten, her advanced reading age and the difficult subject matter result in a book that is more suitable for young teenagers. Young and old adults will also enjoy it too, especially those who can relate to certain situations Calypso has to deal with. <i>A Library of Lemons</i> is definitely a story to read if you are a lover of books - a bookworm. You will not be disappointed.
