2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A diamond in the rough, July 23, 2004
A Kid's Review
This review is from: Before the Lark (Hardcover)
I was very, very, woefully sorry to find out that the original edition of Before the Lark was out of print and the only edition of the book is in large print. Furthermore, it was sad to know that the sales rank was so low. This really is a great book.
I got this book from a school book sale and didn't read it until five years after I purchased it.
The story is about a girl named Jocey Royal who lives during the late 1800's, who has the horrible curse of a cleftlip, or harelip. For that, she is an outcast and is driven to go to a patch of Kansas farmland where she finds out more about har grandmother and her never there father. She also lerans that anyone can have a friend, and that some curses can be cured.
I really wish that more people would read this. Irene Bennett Brown wrote about a topic that rarely anyone thought about- the defects of a harelip. Many American children don't what a harelip is because the defect is fixed before the leave the hospital when they're born. But many poor courntries can't treat children with harelips, so they are shunned, just like Jocey.
I LOVED reading this book. Irene Bennett Brown created an unknown masterpiece and needs to be applauded. PLEASE, for your sake, read this book.
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5.0 out of 5 stars
Don't judge a book by its cover., January 2, 2012
Before the Lark opens with twelve-year-old Jocey Belle Royal living with her ailing grandmother (Gram) in the 1888 poverty of Kansas City, MO. Her mother died six years earlier and she has not heard from or seen her father in over two years.
Jocey works with her grandmother, taking in laundry for the richer families of the city. Born with a cleft lip, she no longer attends school. Teasing by "The Chasers," peers who chant, "Harelip, ugly crip, hole in her lip, snip, snip," has destroyed her self-confidence. She avoids people and relationships, finding solace in her chickens (Opal and Don Juan), horse (Nappy), and the books her father gave her.
Jocey prefers invisibility. However, she has also lost her voice and ability to stand up to others and for herself. A gift comes out of nowhere, in the form of a letter from her father's lawyer. It seems that Jocey is half owner of her father's farm in Council Grove, KS, or if he has been determined to be dead, full owner.
The revelation propels Jocey to decide to move to the farm, with her very unwilling Gram. Jocey is one determined young lady and what happens because of her decision is something else.
Before the Lark was first published in 1982 by Blue Heron Publishing as historical fiction. The story, more importantly, though set in 1888 is still germane and interesting.
I don't want to give away what happens, but I do want to encourage tween readers (and their moms, aunts, grandmothers, or mentors) to pick up a copy of Before the Lark and discover the developments for themselves. The themes of differences, bullying and self-esteem are timeless.
I would recommend Before the Lark as a great selection for mother-daughter book clubs, or for mom and daughter to read and then discuss. A wonderful forward is provided by Pamela Rieny-Kehrberg, assisting the reader with a point of reference when reading the story. Brown also provides some facts about the facts behind the story in her notes at the end of the book.
by Judy Miller
for Story Circle Book Reviews
reviewing books by, for, and about women
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