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Sonny's House of Spies (Richard Jackson Books (Atheneum Hardcover))
 
 
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Sonny's House of Spies (Richard Jackson Books (Atheneum Hardcover)) [Hardcover]

George Ella Lyon (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)


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Book Description

Richard Jackson Books (Atheneum Hardcover)
Sonny is only one of the spies at the Bradshaw house in Mozier, Alabama. But as a child he saw a tray full of dinner come flying across the front hall at his father. His mother's aim was dead on. And Daddy's departure promptly followed.

Loretta, Sonny's older sister, spies by eavesdropping. As she tells him, "How else am I going to survive in a family tight-lipped as tombs?"

But the kids' spying only scratches the surface of what's really going on in this 1950s family in the deep South. While Deaton, the youngest, worries about pirates and vampires, and Uncle Marty, family protector, serves up scripture with every bite at the Circle of Life donut shop, somebody is watching.

Somebody unsuspected by Sonny. But at thirteen he knows something's fishy, and he intends to find out what. That's why one Friday after Uncle Marty pays him for dishwashing at the Circle of Life, he sneaks out of town, first by bike and then by bus. Selma, his mama; Mamby; Nissa; Uncle Sink; Aunt Roo; his sister and brother -- nobody from that all-too-serious but often hilarious crew has a clue where he's gone. And even Sonny can't say exactly what he's after, until those tight-lipped tombs start talking, and life in the house on Rhubarb changes for good.

--This text refers to the Paperback edition.

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Editorial Reviews

From School Library Journal

Grade 5-8–A poignant story set in Alabama in the 1950s. Thirteen-year-old Sonny longs for his father, who left the family when he was six. Uncle Marty, a local bachelor and an Elder at the One-Way Word of Faith Tabernacle, begins to escort the family to church, becoming a friend to Sonny's mother. The boy has a humorous way of describing his elders, seeing their foibles, yet remaining positive and sympathetic toward them. One day while working in Uncle Marty's Circle of Life donut shop, he finds a letter from his father and goes to Mobile to look for him. After an unsuccessful trip, he confronts Marty, who confesses that both he and Sonny's father are homosexual, and that he was asked to look after the family when the boy's dad left. Soon afterward, Marty dies in what is likely suicide, and Sonny realizes that his father is just a weak, selfish man. There is an affecting subplot concerning Sonny's feelings of unrequited love for the daughter of a family servant. He learns that the way one looks at things affects one's life, and begins to understand that secret keeping is harmful. In a postscript, Sonny explains all of the positive changes that have occurred within his family as a result of the spilling of all the family secrets. Lyon conveys a strong sense of Southern life through the cadence of speech, wonderful turns of phrase, and the patterns of daily life. Sonny, smart-mouthed older sister Loretta, and their mother are all well-drawn, realistic characters with whom readers will sympathize.–B. Allison Gray, John Jermain Library, Sag Harbor, NY
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

Gr. 6-10. "Have you ever just all of a sudden known something that you didn't know you knew?" Both hilarious and heartbreaking, 13-year-old Sonny's narrative of his coming-of-age in Mozier, Alabama, in the 1950s puts a new spin on the drama of family secrets. Who is spying on whom? Why? Sonny's angry, outrageously funny older sister, Loretta, knows what's going on: "If you don't get on the road, you'll miss the car wreck." Sonny goes in search of his dad, who left seven years ago, but, instead, finds a loving mentor right next door. With the family story, Lyon weaves in the prejudice of the time, against "queers" as well as African Americans, which comes across through Sonny's dawning awareness of what segregation is like for the family's black housekeeper, Mamby. She is too perfect to be true, and some of the small-town eccentrics may appeal more to adults than to kids, but there's rare honesty in this story of "laugh and death." Lyon's simple words will catch readers with the truth they tell. Hazel Rochman
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 304 pages
  • Publisher: Atheneum/Richard Jackson Books (May 25, 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0689851685
  • ISBN-13: 978-0689851681
  • Product Dimensions: 8.2 x 5.7 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 9.6 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,730,175 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Extra, Extra Read All About It., July 8, 2005
This review is from: Sonny's House of Spies (Richard Jackson Books (Atheneum Hardcover)) (Hardcover)
Red Alert! All middle school librarians take note. My grandson, who thinks reading chapter books is a bit like eating ground glass, could not put this book down. That is after I bribed him to read the first two chapters!

There are people in this book, Loretta, especially, who will make you cry and laugh out loud. Warning, adults and kids both, you will have a hard time putting it down. So you will read it as fast as you can and then, like me, wish you had read it more slowly so you could stretch the enjoyment. It is a winner!
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Especially Excellent for Older YAs and Adults, July 14, 2008
This review is from: Sonny's House of Spies (Richard Jackson Books (Atheneum Hardcover)) (Hardcover)
It's the 1947, in a small town in Alabama and Sonny's dad has just walked out on them. "You don't know my daddy," the book begins, and Sonny tells the reader of the day his life changed. He knows there has to be something more to the split up than he has been told, and it puzzles him. A few years go by, and the reader sees small town Southern life through Sonny's eyes as he tries to handle his own life without a father, as well as every day living with his sometimes funny, sometimes difficult family. Sonny deals with heartbreak, pain, and love, familial and otherwise, and at last finds peace within himself regarding his father.

Sadly, this brief synopsis does nothing for the book. Telling a skeleton outline of the plot with no spoilers and none of Lyon's amazing writing is so unjust! This is an amazing book, with prose that sometimes verges on poetry. Lyon had me laughing out loud with Sonny's predicaments on one page, near tears on another, and spellbound from the sheer beauty of her language so often. She captures the feel of the South so well and so subtly that there are bound to be references that will pass by those uninitiated to Southern culture.

I couldn't NOT share a few lines that caught me especially:

"It was a sleepy kind of morning, the air like bathwater."

"Like some reversible cloth, Mama's laughter flipped over into sobs."

"We just stood by the shiny gray coffin with its handles like fancy toilet-paper holders and said "Yes" and "No" and "Thank you" and breathed whatever breaths came by: mint, onion, tobacco, whiskey, and bad."

"All the windows had been propped open, but it was one of those afternoons when the air lay on top of you like a big cat, and no waving of cardboard Jesus-at-the-door fans could make it get up and move."



My main regret is that I fear the intended audience will not be interested in the subject and that some of the emotional dilemmas may really be too mature for grades 5-8. It would be more appropriate, I think, for older YA readers. I would suggest that a parent of younger readers read it first (I give it a full recommendation for all adult readers) and then decide when/if it's appropriate for their child at that age.

Another quibble is that the dust jacket blurb is not very appealing; I only chose to read it because it took place in the South. I really can't see a child picking this up and saying, "oh, this sounds just what I've been wanting to read". It will most likely take an adult pushing it on them to get a child to read it. A new, more interesting cover would be advised.

But, as far as the book goes. . . It's a five star read for older YAs and adults. Masterful writing all the way through; I will be looking up her other novels right away.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Not a professional reviewer, August 10, 2010
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Sonny's House of Spies Wow! What a truly excellent work of fiction. I know it's fiction...but I KNOW these characters! Sonny's House of Spies may have been written for a younger audience, but adults may enjoy it even more. For any Southerner raised in the '40's and '50's, it takes you home again.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
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Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Uncle Marty, Uncle Sink, Aunt Joy, Aunt Roo, Pastor Biggs, Circle of Life, Miss Scarlett, Sister Clemons, Uncle Hickman, Martin Bonner, Sister Bradshaw, Sonny Bradshaw, Leon Bradshaw, Staniford Road, Freelan Diggs, Orbison Street, Sonny Boy, Thank the Lord
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