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Memory [Mass Market Paperback]

Margaret Mahy (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)


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Book Description

August 2, 1989
When two worlds collide, life begins to make a different sort of sense! On the fifth anniversary of his sister's death, nineteen-year-old Jonny Dart is still troubled by guilt and an imperfect memory of the accident that took her life. He goes searching for the only other witness to the fatal event, his sister's best friend. But instead of finding the answers he's looking for, he finds Sophie -- an old woman with Alzheirmer's. Sophie lives with several cats in genteel but dreadful squalor, and has no memory of recent events. As a temporary outcast and labelled 'loser', Jonny takes refuge with her. In Sophie's house, past and present merge for both of them. Their accidental meeting changes their lives.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Sometimes Jonny, 19, feels that the memory of his sister Janine's death five years before will always be more real to him than anything in his own life. One night, he sets out on a drunken midnight search for Bonny, his sister's best friend. His quest leads him to his old neighborhood, where he meets Sophie West, an old woman. Sophie has Alzheimer's disease, and in her confusion believes that Jonny is the cousin she once loved. Jonny, in need of a place to spend the night, goes home with Sophie. The next day, Jonny's concern for Sophie keeps him from leaving her alone. While cleaning Sophie's cluttered house, Jonny discovers that she has been paying nearly daily "rent" to a local thug. Jonny must therefore stay with her in order to stop this extortion. Through his involvement in the old woman's life, Jonny finds the strength to settle old scores, vanquish long-hidden fears and revive his most secret hopes. While some readers may miss the cozy familial banter found in Mahy's earlier books, the well-thought-out characters and intricately structured plot are profoundly satisfying. Mahy's metaphors simultaneously further the plot and charm the reader. Ages 14-up.
Copyright 1988 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From School Library Journal

Grade 7 Up Memorythe crucial center of our identities, its joy and pain, and the consequences of its dislocationis the theme of Mahy's latest novel. Nine teen-year-old Jonny Dart is both run ning away from the painful memory of his sister's death, and towards under standing his role in that death. In a mo ment of crisis he meets Sophie, an Alz heimer's victim in her 80s, and the two are drawn together. Both are trapped to some extent by their memories; both are outcasts living within a kaleido scopic vision of both past and present. Even the minor characters echo the hold of memory, and the setting is dom inated by a giant fake faucet that hangs on a sign overlooking the old lady's house. What a powerful image of the flow of memory! In caring for Sophie, including one memorable, funny, yet delicate scene where Jonny gently bathes her, readers see a process of re orientation and healing for the torment ed young man. Sophie's condition is de picted realistically as incurable, but readers' empathy and respect for the dignity that lies behind the mismatched clothing and wandering conversation will grow steadily chapter by chapter. Warmly recommended for its insight into a special relationship, vivid de scriptions and depth of character por trayal, this will be appreciated by thoughtful readers. Barbara Hutche son, Greater Victoria Public Library, B.C., Canada
Copyright 1988 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Mass Market Paperback
  • Publisher: Laurel Leaf (August 2, 1989)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 044020433X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0440204336
  • Product Dimensions: 6.7 x 4.1 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 4.8 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,916,834 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Margaret Mahy lives in New Zealand and is internationally acknowledged as one of the most outstanding children's writers today. She is the author of more than two hundred books for children of all ages, two of which have received England's Carnegie Medal and others of which have garnered numerous citations from the American Library Association. She is also the recipient of An Order of New Zealand, the highest honor a citizen can receive. In 2006 she received the Hans Christian Andersen award for her contributions to international children's literature.

 

Customer Reviews

5 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.0 out of 5 stars (5 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Mahy at her best, November 10, 1999
By A Customer
This is an amazing portrayal of the relationship between a ninteen year old "loser" and an old woman suffering from Alzheimer's disease. Margaret Mahy's young adult books are all wonderful, but "Memory" stays with you long after you have read it. Mahy manages to put magic into her novels even when not dealing with magic. When she does deal with magic, it seems natural and everyday. Try her novel "Changeover" if you want to see this in action. This is a book that you can read as a young adult and reread as an adult and it hasn't lost anything.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars wonderful book, December 7, 2000
By 
Claudette Kane (Austin, Texas USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
I love this book. I bought it for myself this spring and I'm giving it for a Christmas present. Mahy always writes with a powerful emotional impact. It's true her stories have some hints of real life sadness in them. But those touches are the reason why the efforts and triumphs of the hero or heroine are so satisfying and triumphant. Mahy's books aren't just for young adults. I'm no young adult, nor is the person I'm giving the book to for Christmas. This story is one a mother could enjoy reading with her daughter. There is so much to dicuss in this story of a kid on a drunk who shows compassion to a stranger. When we realize the stranger has Altzheimer's we know the woman could have been our own grandmother. The terrific story has more impact that a hundred lectures on kindness.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "Memory" lingers well after the reading, June 6, 2002
By A Customer
On the fifth anniversary of his sister's death, 19-year-old Jonny Dart is looking for someone. He is drunk and beat up and searching for someone he has not talked to in five years but with whom he shares a moment he cannot forget. He is searching for Bonny, the only other witness to his sister's death. He manages to stumble through the streets to the house where her parents live.

Drunk and bruised and bloody is not the best way to show up at someone's house asking for their daughter's address, so instead they have a friend take him to the nearest main road where he can catch a taxi home. But Jonny never makes it to the taxi. He wakes up the next morning on the traffic island where he was dropped. Sick and disoriented and with little memory of the night before, he begins to wander.

"Suddenly, with childish horror, he saw another movement in the [storefront] glass...Something rippled towards him... another inhabitant...A stunted person in a long coat was pushing a supermarket cart along the diagonal opposite to the one he was taking. A moment later he made out a short, thin old woman wearing a hat like a crimson chamber pot without a handle. Strands of grey hair hung around her ears... He hesitated and stood completely still so that the old lady could walk past him, but instead she cam right up to him, staring at him, smiling, as if she were waiting for him to begin a conversation. Jonny remained silent. In the end she was the one who spoke first. `Are you the one?' she asked."

And so the first of many small events of fate or destiny or some strange supernatural power occur to pull Jonny Dart into Sophie's surreal world of missing memories, mistaken identities, misplaced people and a world out of time.

Jonny thinks he will just follow Sophie to her home, to make sure she gets there safe, but when she invites him in for a cup of tea (which she never remembers to put the tea in) he is sucked into a world which to Jonny is both repulsive, fascinating, and strangely comforting in its disorder. He is immediately assaulted by the smell, the possible sources of which are too many to sort out: Sophies many, many cats that share her house, unwashed dishes, wet bedsheets, perhaps the dead bird in the pie plate which has occupied the refrigerator for who knows how long or maybe it was just Sophie herself. Nothing is as it should be in Sophie's house. Cheese is in the soap dish. The pigeonholes of the desk are occupied by an assortment of eggshells, orange peels, an old toothpaste tube, a crochet-covered coat hanger, and hair curlers. The only food to be found is the tea-less tea and several opened bags of cookies. But the "as it should be" world is something Jonny longs to escape, or maybe it's that he's never felt a part of it, and he feels a strange kind of comfort and safety in the unnatural order of Sophie's house.

More than once, Jonny decides to leave, and more than once something prompts him to return. He becomes Sophie's reluctant yet self-appointed protector, and the forces that pulled him into Sophie's world of lost memories lead him at last to Bonny and through his own haunting memories.

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