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The Eclipse of Moonbeam Dawson [Hardcover]

Jean Davies Okimoto (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)


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Book Description

October 15, 1997
Meeting girls and going to school and hanging out with friends shouldn't be that tough. But it is if you're fifteen and you're biracial and your name is Moonbeam and you live on a commune with your mother and a bunch of granola-munching, tie-dyed, tofu-eating, sandal-wearing hippies! All moonbeam wants is to be normal. but as Moonbeam is about to discover, life for a normal teenagers is anything but.

Editorial Reviews

From School Library Journal

Grade 7-10. The story of 15-year-old Moonbeam Dawson's search for his identity?for who he is and where he belongs?exquisitely captures the tension between the boy's love for his mother and his need for independence. After spending five years in a commune on Heather Mountain in British Columbia, Moonbeam and his mother travel to the gulf islands in search of work and a place to live. All Moonbeam wants is to go to a normal school rather than be home schooled, have friends, eat meat and junk food, and meet girls. When he gets a kitchen job at the posh Stere Island Lodge, his mother refuses to work for the rich clientele, whom she finds totally offensive. Moonbeam rebels, taking the job, which comes with an apartment for himself. In an attempt to redefine himself, he takes a new name, "Reid," that has interesting connections to his half-Haida Indian background. Snubbed by the pretty daughter of a timber executive, Reid realizes that in redefining himself he has in some respects come full circle, returning to the core values he has lived with all his life. He has changed, but more importantly, he has come to accept these values as his own. Moonbeam/Reid is an endearing character whose unique upbringing has given him a quirky and amusing perspective on life. Teens will find themselves cheering him on, suffering with him in his oh-so-embarrassing moments, and figuring out with him the meaning of family, first love, and friendship.?Connie Tyrrell Burns, Mahoney Middle School, South Portland, ME
Copyright 1997 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Review

"The story of fifteen year old Moonbeam Dawson's search for identity--for who he is and where he belongs--exquisitely captures his need for independence. Teen will find themselves cheering him on, suffering with him in his oh-so-embarassing moments, and figuring out with him the meaning of family, first love, and friendship."--School Library Journal
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 192 pages
  • Publisher: Tor Books; 1st edition (October 15, 1997)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 031286244X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0312862442
  • Product Dimensions: 8.6 x 5.7 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 11.2 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #8,820,023 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Jean Davies Okimoto's latest book, The Love Ceiling, was a winner of a 2009 Next Generation Indie Book Award. She is also the recipient of the American Library Association "Best Books for Young Adults" Award, the International Reading Association's Reader's Choice Award, the IRA/CBC Young Adults' Choice Award, the Parents' Choice Award, the Washington Governor's Award, the 1993 Maxwell Medallion for Best Children's Book of the Year, and two of her books have been recognized as Smithsonian Notable Books. In 2007 she received the Green Earth Book Award from the Newton Marasco Foundation and in 2008 the Green Prize for Sustainable Literature honor book, a national award given by the Santa Monica Public Library.

Her publishers include Atlantic Monthly Press, Putnam, Little, Brown & Co., Dell, Scholastic, HarperCollins, and the Simul Press in Japan which has published Japanese editions of her novels My Mother Is Not Married To My Father and It's Just Too Much. Her short stories have also appeared in four Delacourte anthologies, Short Stories by Outstanding Writers for Young Adults. Shelley Duvall produced an animated version of Blumpoe the Grumpoe Meets Arnold the Cat for the series "Bedtime Stories" which was narrated by John Candy and appeared on HBO and Showtime. In connection with her non-fiction title, Boomerang Kids: How to Live with Adult Children who Return Home, she has appeared on the Today Show, the CBS Morning Show, The Oprah Winfrey Show, and CNN.

Her one-act play, Hum it Again, Jeremy has been produced in schools in Vancouver, Toronto and New York. The Northwest Asian American Theater in Seattle produced the world premiere of Uncle Hideki based on her novel Talent Night and in 2006 produced Uncle Hideki and the Empty Nest. Book-it Repertory Theatre produced The Eclipse of Moonbeam Dawson based on her novel by the same name.

Her other titles include Norman Schnurman, Average Person, a mystery, Who Did It, Jenny Lake?, Jason's Women, Molly By Any Other Name, and Take A Chance, Gramps! which was a Junior Library Guild selection, named to the Lone Star State Reading List, and nominated for the Mark Twain Award and the Pacific Northwest Booksellers Award.

A Place For Grace, published by Sasquatch Books, was the first picture book for a general audience to feature a hearing dog and a deaf character and was praised by Smithsonian as "One of this year's most charming and large-hearted offerings." No Dear, Not Here a picture book about the marbled murrelets, endangered seabirds and their quest for a nest in the Pacific Northwest, is also a Sasquatch title and was designated a 1995 Smithsonian Notable Book for Children.

A member of PEN American Center, the Author's Guild and the Dramatists Guild, she has a master's degree in psychology from Antioch University and is the founder of the Seattle Reading Awards, which recognizes the fifth grade students in the Seattle Public Schools who have shown the most improvement in reading. The program focuses on Chapter One, Bilingual and Special Education students and she has served as its co-chair since the awards began under the sponsorship of the Seattle Reading Association in 1986.

She and her husband Joe live on Vashon Island, Washington. Together they have four grown children, six grandchildren and a dog who thinks it's a person.

 

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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars funny, insightful story of growing older and wiser at age 15, January 3, 1998
This review is from: The Eclipse of Moonbeam Dawson (Hardcover)
Moonbeam Dawson does not like the hippie name his mother gave him. It says more about her than who he thinks he is at age 15 and he decides he must change it and declare some independence. He chooses Reid,hoping that will bring a little less unwanted drama into his life. Reid takes a step away from his warm, single-parent mother and begins to discover work, girls, heartache, and loyalty. We are enchanted with his journey,whether we are 15, 50, or even more.As Reid makes peace with his mother,the fact of his Native American father, and the quirkiness of his childhood, he reminds us that our roots are as important as our wings and that growing up requires both, with love.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
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First Sentence:
Moonbeam Dawson sat in the old truck watching the rain pound against the windshield. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
nice foster home, bear body parts, employee apartments, biosphere project, peace train, dinner shift, gulf islands, bear hunting
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Heather Mountain, Davies Okimoto, Jim Goltz, Michelle Lamont, Palmer's Land, Bear Alert, Reid Dawson, The Eclipse of Moonbeam Dawson, Port Alberni, Stere Island Lodge, Bill Reid, Happy Children of the Good Earth, British Columbia, Long Beach, North America, Anne Depue, Clayoquot Sound, Ellis Lake, Gregory Thomas, Hope Island, Vancouver Island, Abby Dawson, Brad Wellman, Harvey Hattenbach, Meares Island
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