2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Key to the golden Firebird, November 6, 2005
A Kid's Review
The Key to the Golden Firebird
Maureen Johnson
This is the story of three teenage sisters that have to work together to over come a tragedy in their life. A year ago the three sisters Brooks, May, and Palmer found out about their dads death. He died from a heart attack in his beloved 1967 Firebird. Their family is falling apart now that their dad is gone. Their mom is not home much because of her work. She has a night time job as a nurse.
All three of the sisters have a different way of coping with this tragedy. Brooks is the oldest of the three girls. She found a boyfriend, Dave, that she is spending every minute of her free time with. He is being a bad influence on her life. Dave talked her into quitting her high school softball teem, and now she is into a life of drinking, staying out late, and getting into trouble. This life leads her to getting arrested for drunk driving!
May is the middle sister. She is known as the responsible one. She is doing well in school, and has an after school job to raise money for collage. May does something that no one would expect from a responsible child. She fails her driving test. When her neighbor, Pete, agrees to give her lessons, May discovers new feelings for Pete. She is falling for the once mean neighbor that would play tricks on her every change he got.
Finally there's Palmer. She is the youngest sister. She likes to keep to herself, and never tell anyone anything about her life. She is an amazing softball player. She is the pitcher on her high school team. She watches tv a lot and likes to go through her moms closet. One day while she is looking through old things in her mothers closet she discovers something that will change all of them forever. It is the key to their dads old Firebird.
I really enjoyed reading this book. I really like the authors style of writing. I like the action of the book, and how it really makes you feel like a part of the story. I also liked how in the beginning they are all separate and secluded, but by the end they discover that it is really important to stick together and to trust each other.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you? Yes
No
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Emotional and touching story of 3 sisters coping with death, September 10, 2004
It's been a year since the unthinkable happened. On that fateful day, Mike Gold had a fatal heart attack in his beloved 1967 golden Firebird Pontiac. Since they lost their father, the Gold sisters --- May, Brooks and Palmer --- have not been the same. Before, they were typical teenagers who enjoyed carefree summer pranks. Now, their mother is not around as much; she has to work the night shift as a nurse to support the family, and the three sisters are left to fend for themselves.
THE KEY TO THE GOLDEN FIREBIRD tells the stories of three teenage sisters who are all very different, yet they're struggling with the same problem. May Gold, short for Mayzie, is the reliable sister --- she's smart, does well in school, works a part-time job to save money for college, and is expected to keep a watchful eye on her younger sister, Palmer. In a very un-Maylike turn of events, May fails her driver's exam. Pete Camp, the adorable dorky neighbor, volunteers to teach May to drive. During May's summer of driving lessons, she also encounters a bumpy ride of falling in love with someone she knew her whole life.
Brooks Gold is the oldest. As a testament to their father's addiction to baseball, Brooks is named after the famous baseball player Brooks Robinson. Brooks herself is a star softball player, but in the summer after her father's death, she finds herself hanging out with a new wild boyfriend, Dave, and his inner-circle of misfits. When Dave suggests that she quit the team, she comes to a realization.
Brooks thinks, "Her father had put a bat in her hand the minute she was strong enough to hold it up, and that was that. Afternoons and weekends were for playing. She didn't even know what people who didn't play sports did with their time. But she had to admit, she'd seen less and less of a point in playing in the last year." Once off the team, Brooks has more time to drink excessively, come home way too late, and get into trouble.
Palmer Gold, the youngest, is also an amazing softball player. Even though she's only a freshman, she's a pitcher on the varsity softball team. Palmer lives in a world of her own, keeping her problems to herself. She doesn't tell anyone about the panic attacks that keep waking her up in the middle of the night. She also snoops around watching her sisters and rummaging through her mother's closet. During one of her investigations, she finds something she wasn't expecting that will be the key to helping her and her sisters feel better.
Maureen Johnson's first novel tells the touching tale of three sisters' journey as they find a way to make peace with their father's death. The Gold family deals with their grief the same way they treat their problems --- silently. As a result, each sister has an emotional explosion at the end of the book. While dealing with their emotions, they are also forced to realize the importance of each other as family. At times sad and at times humorous, THE KEY TO THE GOLDEN FIREBIRD is an engaging read that you will enjoy.
--- Reviewed by Kristi Olson (zooey24@yahoo.com)
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you? Yes
No
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Fire up that engine, June 1, 2004
I loved this story. It was funny, engaging, moving, and ultimately totally gripping. I read a lot, and in many genres (from SciFi to sufi mysticism - no kidding), and I quite literally could not put the Key to the Golden Firebird down. The characters were very real to me, and their situations sympathetic and interesting. The way people acted seemed very natural - just as confusing as people are all the time. I was desperate to find out if May could pull something good out of her awkwardness with Pete, and the spiralling troubles of her family, and ... well, I won't spoil the suspense for you. Read it, and love it yourself!!
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you? Yes
No