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10 Reviews
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
When the parents split up, where do you fit in?,
By
This review is from: The Suitcase Kid (Paperback)
Andy West's parents have divorced and have started new lives with other partners. Andy is to spend one week with her mother and the "Baboon" and his miserable children. While there, she is forced to share her step-sister Katie's room, and Katie goes out of her way to make Andy miserable. On the weeks Andy stays with her dad and his "new agey" wife Carrie, she shares a room with 5 year old twins Zen and Crystal, and their mess. To add to the misery, Carrie is pregnant. The only one who understands's Andy's confusion is her constant companion Radish, a tiny toy rabbit. Radish understands how Andy misses the tiny cottage she and her parents shared. Radish understands how hard it is to make people you barely know, your family. Radish understands how hard it is to remember all your schoolwork and belongings when you stay at two places. All Andy wants is a place for her and Radish to feel at home. One day she and Radish discover a tiny, hidden garden, that they long to make their own. This is a sensitive story of divorce and one child trying to cope with events out of her control. Once again, Jacqueline Wilson has displayed an uncanny understanding of the needs of a child, and a true ear for dialog. This is a sweet book and a must read for anyone you know who has been touched by divorce.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Suitcase Kid,
By Rosie Walshe Scarr (aged 9) (London, England) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Suitcase Kid (Paperback)
This story is about a girl called Andy who tells how her parents split up. She now spends one week living with her Mum and the next with her Dad. She used to live in a place called Mulberry Cottage, which was her dream cottage. Her step-parents both have children but she hates her step-Dad's kids. He has got this really mean daughter called Katie who just picks on Andy non-stop. And then there's Graham who is very quiet and just sits in his room playing on his computer. And eldest one (? ) just hangs out at bars with her mates all the time. Her step-Mum has two twins called Crystal and Zen. Crystal is quite nice but Zen is just annoying. This books covers many different themes - anger, jealousy, meanness - as Andy tries to cope with her two new families. Some of it is quite sad but most of it is funny. Most of it is based on Jacqueline Wilson's life when she was a kid, and I think it is the best of her books. It appealed to me because it is a bit like my family.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
It's my favourite book in the world,
By A Customer
This review is from: The Suitcase Kid (Hardcover)
I am Kate Roberts aged 8, from Wellington, New Zealand.
I felt sorry for Andrea when she moved. She didn't have many friends. It was an exciting book because Andrea went from one place to another and I thought her rabbit, Radish, had good adventures which kids would like to read about.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Tug of War - ABCs of Divorce,
By
This review is from: The Suitcase Kid (Hardcover)
Andrea (Andy) at 10 is living out of a suitcase. She alternates her weeks between her divorced parents. Her father has remarried Carrie, a post-Woodstock flower child who has 5-year-old twins Zen and Crystal from a previous marriage. She is pregnant with her third child, a girl. Andrea tries to make sense out of this by going through the ABCs of divorce, with each chapter going down the alphabet.
Andrea's mother has also remarried. Andrea dislikes her widower stepfather and calls him the Baboon. He has bratty Katie, 10 who is thoroughly spoiled; Grant, 12 and Paula, 14 who are pleasant and reasonable. I just hated the way Andrea's mother defended Katie regardless. Katie treated Andrea badly with impunity and that bothered me. Even though one could sympathize with her fear of dying in her sleep, because as Grant explained, Katie was told when their mother died that death "was like going to sleep." Still, that doesn't excuse her execrable treatment of Andrea and her malicious sneakiness. People who glorify Other People's Children to their own and let themselves be conned and beguiled by Other People's Children make me tired. Sneaky Katie lies; destroys Andrea's things and ridicules her for being inordinately attached to her stuffed rabbit, Radish. I disliked the way Andrea's parents used her as a pawn against each other. When the girl became ill and couldn't leave one home for another, once again her natural parents try to use her against each other. Another thing that bothered me was the way each parent spoke against the other's new spouse. I also disliked the Baboon's parents because they excluded Andrea and made a big point of buying presents for their natural grandchildren. Andrea's school work suffers; she and her parents see a counselor who talks down to Andrea and is generally irksome. I didn't like the cloying, annoying way she spoke to Andrea. In time, Andrea accepts the fact that she is the link in two extended families; Katie will continue being allowed to get away with murder, but at least she has the twins, Grant, Paula and some kind neighbors who have moved into her former house on her side. The house she pines for is called Mulberry Cottage. That in turn makes me think of the inane song, "here we go 'round the mulberry bush." Plenty of thorny characters in this story.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
STUCK IN THE MIDDLE,
A Kid's Review
This review is from: The Suitcase Kid (Paperback)
Hve you ever been stuck in the middle? 12 year old Andy has suffered the divorce of her parents. Everything was perfect from Andys point of view, she loved living in milbury cottage. Then everything changed now she is thrown around from house to house. Mums 1 week her dads the next. Just as shethinks nothing can get ant worse her step mum falls pregnant. Will Andy beable to maintain the torture of her annoying little step sister will her mum and dad ever stop arguing when they meat find out in this wonderful story .
5.0 out of 5 stars
Cool Book,
A Kid's Review
This review is from: The Suitcase Kid (Paperback)
I am 10 years old and I loved this book and the way it went A,B,C,D and I loved Zoe at the end and the Peters and Katie because she was naughty and best of all I loved Andy and Radish the 2 main people.
3.0 out of 5 stars
The suitcase kid,
A Kid's Review
This review is from: The Suitcase Kid (Kindle Edition)
I think its a good story but somtimes a bit boring and i like the way the chapters are labeled with A,B,C and on it only got good when chapter C came along but the rest was realy good and it was funny to. The best bit for me was when she finds out about the Peters it was realy nice at that bit and i think katie was quite mean
so i rated it 3 stars out of 5
4.0 out of 5 stars
A student review,
By Edward G. Nilges "Author, 'Build Your Own .Ne... (Hong Kong, China) - See all my reviews (REAL NAME)
This review is from: The Suitcase Kid (Paperback)
Jacqueline Wilson, the writer of THE SUITCASE KID (1992), has won many awards by having her own style, in which she typically writes about modern British kids facing daily problems. The novel comments on the common problem of divorce and portray a kid called Andrea, revealing her situation when her parents divorced. Her Mum remarried into a family with three chilodren. The novel discusses how Andrea divides her time between two homes.
The complication continues in the story, as Andrea lives with her Dad for a week, and then lives with her Mum for a week. Since she doesn't a have a stable situation, and feeling that she's not part of either family, she determines to reunite Mum and Dad and go back to her original home, Mulberry Cottage, full of warm memories. She is right in the middle of the see-saw. However, there is an eternal advocate for Andrea, and it's a Sylvanian Family rabbit called Radish, her pet, and very important in Andrea's life. Andrea is having hard time in tolerating her step-mother, father, sisters, and brother: she suffers from unfairness. When she faces her parents every week, the cacophony of argument roars throught the house. But, Andrea faces the situation with maturity. I adored reading this book. The chapters are cleverly divided by letter-based names such as chapter one, "A is for Andy" which is creative and special for little kids but may seem dumb for teenagers. The story starts slowly but builds drama and allows to identify with Andrea. Andrea no longer gets to see her best friend as much because although Andrea still sees Aileen at school, Aileen no longer lives close and spends more time with Fiona. I personally loathed the parents of Andrea's Mum's new husband, "Uncle" Bill because they refuse to send presents, saying there is no blood connection. Also, Mum's new stepdaughter, Katie, is total booger. Katie's execrable treatment of Andrea is unfair, even though Katie's real Mum has died. I hated Katie even though the author made me see that Katie had a reason for her behavior. I recommend this book.
1 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Very Realistic,
A Kid's Review
This review is from: The Suitcase Kid (Paperback)
This book is about Andrea (Andy) West. It is a funny, realistic and usually quite moving story! I would advise it to anyone who would give The Lottie Project 5 stars!
1 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Bags of fun - The Suitcase Kid review by B O'Problem,
A Kid's Review
This review is from: The Suitcase Kid (Paperback)
Andrea is a ten year old kid on the move. It's a tough decision between Mum with the Baboon or Dad and Carrie. Will she be on the move forever? The answer lies in the story. A delightful one to please the kids.
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Suitcase Kid by Jacqueline Wilson (School & Library Binding - July 2005)
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