From Publishers Weekly
"Honey," Harper's mother says to her sweetly, "You're no longer just a migrant for God. You're on his rescue squad." Harper, a highly intelligent teenager given to irony, tells how she ended up leaving her Christian fundamentalist family in this first-person narrative. Ever since her parents have been "reborn," the family has been traveling all over the country in their Roadmaster, speaking out against blasphemy, especially the kind found in C. S. Lewis's Narnia tales, Judy Blume's books and textbooks that teach evolution. But while giving off the outward impression that she is a believer too, Harper is actually a secret devotee of all the books her parents despise ("Are you there Judy? It's me, Harper," she says at one point). Harper's eventual escape is partially inspired by her correspondence with an author of fantasy stories. In this very smart (and somewhat acerbic) book, Newbery honoree Lasky ( Double Trouble Squared ; The Night Journey ) combines fictional characters with real-life authors and religious groups (such as Operation Rescue) to create a credible and entertaining story of an emerging independent thinker. Ages 12-up.
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From School Library Journal
Grade 6-9-In a problematic story with a cast of disappointing, one-dimensional characters and a plot that misses the mark, Harper Jessup, 14, hides her love of books and reading from her Christian fundamentalist parents. Told as a flashback as she runs away to a grandmother in Georgia, the girl reflects on her life. When her unemployed, angry father and desperate, placating mother find comfort and financial reward in the church, they embark on careers as missionaries for F.A.C.E.(Family Action for Christian Values) and F.I.S.T.(Families Involved in Saving Traditional Values) and take to the road in a spiffy recreational vehicle to preach the gospel of book censorship. Meanwhile, Harper continues her secret life of reading, her only solace. When the family finally settles in California, she makes a too-good-to-be-true first friend, and he helps her make her escape when her parents and the church encourage her younger sister and a friend to write an anti-Semetic letter to JEWdy Blume and force the girls to become active in an anti-abortion campaign. For a person so immersed in reading and ideas, Harper never questions the fact that her parents' religious involvement is more monetary than spiritual. Compared with the fundamentalist family and church members in Lois Ruby's Miriam's Well (Scholastic, 1993), whose actions are a constant testament to their deep, abiding faith, Harper's church and family are unconvincing. Just as the girls are manipulated by the adults around them, so readers are manipulated through this heavy-handed anticensorship tract.
Alice Casey Smith, Monmouth County Library Headquarters, Manalapan, NJCopyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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