From Publishers Weekly
Callisto, influenced by her astrophysicist grandmother, views humanity in terms of celestial bodies. She considers herself to be a moon, living off the "borrowed light" of more charismatic individuals, the stars. Now facing an unwanted pregnancy, 16-year-old Callisto has to stop hiding in the shadows and rely on her own judgment. Relayed in the first person, Australian author Feinberg's first YA novel is poetic in both its language and its pacing. The phase between Callisto's pregnancy test and her appointment at an abortion clinic seems to move in slow motion, allowing readers time to grasp and ponder her predicament, her emotions and her complex relationships with her inattentive parents, her science-minded grandmother, her beloved little brother and her callow ex-boyfriend. The ephemeral quality of Fienberg's writing camouflages flaws in the plottingAincluding the just-in-time introduction of a supportive young man, and Callisto's only occasional and obtuse readings of her mother's revelatory old diaries. The pro-choice message doesn't preclude respect or consideration for other options, and even if audience members disagree with Callisto's decision, they will respect her ability to take charge of her destiny. Ages 14-up. (June)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
From School Library Journal
Grade 9 Up-Callisto May, named after Jupiter's largest moon, feels lost in her dysfunctional family. Her "spiritualist" mother seeks answers through s?ances but is physically and emotionally unavailable to her children. Her father deals in African art and barely acknowledges his family, even when he is at home. Even her grandmother, a world-renowned astronomer and Callisto's intellectual mentor, is unavailable. Only 5-year-old Jeremy shows unconditional love for his 16-year-old sister/surrogate mother. When Callisto discovers she's pregnant, her surfer boyfriend wants no part of fatherhood, and she is torn as to whether she should try to break her mother's shell or reach out to her absent father. Her fateful decision about her future and Jeremy's disappearance shatters her parents' insular worlds. The adults reveal secret grief that has darkened their family life, opening a floodgate of emotions and talk in what Callisto calls their "own Truth and Reconciliation Commission." The teen's isolation and her search for acceptance, friends, and self-affirmation have a universal, realistic, yet contemporary feel. Callisto only considers one option: abortion or not. The clinic scene avoids didacticism, even with the appearance of pro-life demonstrators. Some readers will be put off by long introspective passages and quotes from the mother's diary, but overall, Fienberg weaves a readable, richly realized tale.
Gail Richmond, San Diego Unified Schools, CA Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.