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The Other Sister
 
 
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The Other Sister [Paperback]

S.T. Underdahl (Author)
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)

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Book Description

March 8, 2007

Josey Muller’s regular life—studying with her best friends, planning for the Hollidazzle dance, and gossiping about hot guys—is shaken like a snow globe when her parents drop an A-bomb: she has a sister! Pressured to give up the baby they conceived in high school, her parents are overjoyed to reunite with Audrey. Even Josey’s brothers are cool with it.

No longer the only daughter and the "smart one" in the family, Josey struggles to accept her infuriatingly friendly, witty, and talented older sister. But feelings of betrayal and jealousy threaten to boil over when she learns that Audrey is on her way to becoming a psychologist, Josey’s life goal. Just when she’s given up on ever feeling like a sister to this stranger, a new side of Audrey is revealed . . . and their real-life nature versus nurture experiment offers a fresh start for them both.


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Editorial Reviews

From School Library Journal

Grade 7 Up—Josey Muller, 15, is the only daughter and the best student in her family, which give her a special identity that she cherishes. Then her parents reveal that she has an older sister, now 25. The Mullers have always regretted that they succumbed to parental pressure to surrender Audrey as a newborn, and are thrilled when she contacts them. Josey's brothers and two closest friends assume that she will be delighted to have an older sister. Josey herself is stunned that she views Audrey as an interloper who eclipses her status in the family. Even worse, the young woman is working toward a PhD in psychology, which has been the teen's dream for years. The Mullers are drawn sympathetically, but are understandably so elated by their reunion with Audrey that it takes them a while to recognize Josey's complex feelings. Underdahl has a deft touch in presenting the protagonist's relationships with her friends, crushes on boys, and the pressure of doing well in school. Ultimately, with the support of her parents, friends, and especially Audrey, Josey comes to appreciate her own uniqueness in her evolving family. A subplot involves her older brother's physical relationship with his girlfriend, which worries the Mullers, as they well understand the consequences of an unplanned pregnancy. This vivid, realistic portrait of a family in transition will hold readers' interest to the very last page.—Deborah Vose, Highlands Elementary School, Braintree, MA
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Review

Gently touching and ultimately hopeful, Underdahl lets the reader know that while the past can't be erased, a new and loving present can be created. -- Kirkus Reviews, February 2007

Underdahl has a deft touch in presenting the protagonist's relationships with her friends, crushes on boys, and the pressure of doing well in school. Ultimately, with the support of her parents, friends, and especially Audrey, Josey comes to appreciate her own uniqueness in her evolving family. A subplot involves her older brother's physical relationship with his girlfriend, which worries the Mullers, as they well understand the consequences of an unplanned pregnancy. This vivid, realistic portrait of a family in transition will hold readers' interest to the very last page.-Deborah Vose, Highlands Elementary School, Braintree, MA -- School Library Journal, March 2007

Product Details

  • Reading level: Ages 12 and up
  • Paperback: 256 pages
  • Publisher: Flux (March 8, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0738709336
  • ISBN-13: 978-0738709338
  • Product Dimensions: 8.2 x 5 x 0.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 8 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,500,429 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Susan Thompson Underdahl lives and writes in Grand Forks, ND where she is a clinical neuropsychologist, wife, and mother/stepmother to five teenagers and one teenager-in-training. In her free time, she enjoys spending time with her family, reading, and exploring anything new and creative. Her guilty pleasures include reality television and glazed doughnuts.

Underdahl's other claims to fame include the ability to breathe under water (but not on command), an eight-year relationship with a ghost, and an encounter with Kevin Bacon at the local post-office (that's her story and she's sticking to it.) She does most of her writing in the food court at the mall, or on her tiny porch when the North Dakota weather allows.

 

Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The Other Sister, November 4, 2007
This review is from: The Other Sister (Paperback)
The Other Sister
S.T. Underdahl. Minnesota: Woodbury, 2007. 248 pp. $8.95.
ISBN 978-0-7387-0933-8

What if everything you thought about your own family was a big, fat lie? This thought springs into the mind of fifteen-year-old Josey after her parents reveal a secret that could change her life forever. Everyone hopes that they have a normal family with very little or no secrets among them, and for Josey Muller, it seemed like she had that life. She has a Mother and a Father who love her and two brothers, who at times drive her crazy, care for her too. We are greeted with a cover of The Other Sister, with the word other out of place in a black hole. This other is significant and highlights the beginning of Josey's discoveries.
Fifteen-year-old Josey Muller is the only daughter of Anne and Bill Muller. Or at least that is what she thinks until her Mother springs the news that she has an older sister. Audrey Merriday is ten years older than Josey and was born while Josey's parents were in High School. Their parents forced them to put her up for adoption merely only a minute after being born. Audrey has now contacted her mother through an adoption agency and her Mom is more excited and happy than Josey has ever seen her.
For Josey Muller, this is not pretend...it is her life. Suddenly she's not the only daughter, and sister of her two brothers. This girl Audrey, her older sister, is all her parents can talk about. She wants to be in high spirits like her Mom, but how is she supposed to be thrilled when her entire world has gone topsy-turvy? Is it possible that she could ever enjoy having a sister? "I hoped I wasn't going to start passing out whenever anyone referred to Audrey as a member of the family, like some kind of post-hypnotic suggestion" (121). Josey feels displaced that her parents are ecstatic and her brothers are adjusting fairly well. She is no longer the only girl. She is no longer the middle child. She is now the other daughter, and she is not quite sure how to act around the newfound sister.
A Theme that progresses throughout the book is `Don't judge a book by its cover'. The book stands close to that saying in a way that Josey is learning not to make assumptions without fully knowing about the circumstances. Getting to know Audrey not only as a person, but also as a sister is going to be difficult for the whole family, particularly Josey, but she can't get carried away with judgments that she isn't equip to make.
The only way Josey can deal with these occurrences is to take a step back and truly see not only how she feels but also how her sister feels. There are two parts to every story and Josey just needs to step out of the box and take an outlook from Audrey's shoes. By Josey worrying about how the situation was affecting her family, and most of all herself, she was forgetting that Audrey was left dangling between two families. Will Josey give the situation a chance?
Tender and heartfelt, The Other Sister is brimming with emotion. Josey's struggle to cope with news and find her place is easy to relate to. Even though she does come off selfish and for a teenager, way in control, but I think it's a teenager's nature to pretend to be that way. And although some ideas don't get through as easily as expected, it causes you to be thinking in Josey's shoes, you are caught in the act of laughing and crying with Josey. Relatable and eye-opening, The Other Sister gives readers a chance to see behind the scenes of adoption reunions.

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A wonderful story, March 2, 2007
This review is from: The Other Sister (Paperback)
The idea that someone else - rich and famous and permissive - is your parent is a common childhood fantasy. The idea that someone else is your sibling is NOT, however. When the new sibling is beautiful and smart, a young girl's life can suddenly seem turned upside down. This is the premise of Underdahl's well-crafted novel about 16-year-old Josey, whose parents never told her that she was not quite the only girl in the family. When her adopted-out older sister, Audrey, is reunited with the family, Josey has to deal with a host of new feelings, many unpleasant and difficult, and a re-arrangement of family relationships.

Underdahl's characters are well-rounded and likable. Josey's interactions with her friends are believable peeks into the lives of teenaged girls, and her parents are complex in their longing for and delight in their first child, while understanding the difficulties that Josey is having accepting this new view of them and the family. I'm older than the target "young adult" audience, but because of Underdahl's excellent writing (and also because I once was a 16-year-old girl), I found "The Other Sister" engrossing and found that I was really caring about the characters and their situations. Although this book is a must-read for any person whose life has been affected by adoption, it is also a genuinely good story that had me absorbed from the first page to the last word. I give it my highest recommendation.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Courtesy of Teens Read Too, July 28, 2007
This review is from: The Other Sister (Paperback)
Everyone hopes that they have a normal family with very little or no secrets among them, and for Josey Muller, it seemed like she had that life. She had a mother and father who loved her and two brothers who, although they can sometimes drive her crazy, care for her, too. But then Josey's life turns upside down when her parents tell her that her brothers aren't the only siblings that Josey has.

Josey also has a much older sister, Audrey, the daughter that her parents had to put up for adoption, hoping that she would get a better life. Audrey is getting married and thought that this would be the perfect chance to find her birth parents and possibly even meet up with them. At first Josey is perfectly fine with the whole ordeal; that is, until the day she will finally get to see her sister draws near, and the entire situation becomes all too real for her.

Josey's entire life that she was so used to was officially going to change. She wasn't going to be the only daughter and sister in her family, and her parents are beginning to forget about how she feels. What's worse is how Josey's dream of becoming a psychologist has already been accomplished by her older sister, which only makes Josey feel inferior to Audrey.

The only way Josey can deal with these occurrences is to take a step back and truly see not only how she feels but also how her sister feels. But will Josey give this situation a chance?

THE OTHER SISTER was completely real and meaningful. Having Josey as the main character just gives the book the perfect tone it needs to truly capture the essence that a teenager would feel when something unexpected pops up in their life. A very unique story with an ending that was surprising and perfectly written, THE OTHER SISTER was a great debut from S. T. Underdahl.

Reviewed by: Randstostipher "tallnlankryn" Nguyen
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Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
psychology test, psychology paper, nature versus nurture
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Brandon Burke, Diet Coke, North Dakota, Charlie Goodall, Grand Forks, Isla Mujeres, Coach Hagen, Josh Marto
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