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Postcards to Father Abraham

Postcards to Father Abraham

List Price: $17.95
Your Price: $12.21
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An involving, compelling story.
Review: Ages 12 and older will find this an involving story telling of an ex-runner's struggle with the removal of her leg due to cancer. Her anger and struggle to overcome her disability take the form of letters written to a past idol, Abe Lincoln, which help her come to grips with her life.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Short chapters = fast pace
Review: Her brother is shell-shocked from his tour of duty in Vietnam. She doesn't get along with her banker father. Her sister, a math genius, struggles to make sense of it all. She has been expelled from school. Her mother is dead. She is lying in a hospital, recovering from the cancer that stole her runner's legs. And in an O. Henry moment, her estranged best friend sends her a pair of running shoes.
As Meghan recovers from her amputation, she finds connections to Abraham Lincoln through cornfields, feet, war, writing, and tragedy. Interesting and little-known facts about Lincoln surface naturally in the narrative. Desperate for a father figure, bitter over her tragedies, and unable to express herself to her therapist, Meghan writes postcards to the past president to release her fury and confusion. She feels a strong bond between Lincoln's suffering and her own, and wonders if she too can rise above it all.
The chapters that reveal Meghan's late 60's past and 1972 present are short but never spartan. Illinois cornfields are painted with vibrant and succinct detail; the joy of running is portrayed beautifully, making this an excellent choice for female athletes. Chapters read like diary entries, and move fluidly from past to present in even strides. Not all loose ends are tied up, but by the end it is clear the Meghan is on the road to emotional and physical recovery, taking small steps each day.
A bibliography would have been a welcome addition to this book. Readers who want to know more about Lincoln after this novel should be directed to Abraham Lincoln: A Writer's Life: by Harold Holzer for insights into Lincoln as a writer, and Russell Freedman's Lincoln: A Photobiography for more details about the tragic figure of Lincoln.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Short chapters = fast pace
Review: Her brother is shell-shocked from his tour of duty in Vietnam. She doesn't get along with her banker father. Her sister, a math genius, struggles to make sense of it all. She has been expelled from school. Her mother is dead. She is lying in a hospital, recovering from the cancer that stole her runner's legs. And in an O. Henry moment, her estranged best friend sends her a pair of running shoes.
As Meghan recovers from her amputation, she finds connections to Abraham Lincoln through cornfields, feet, war, writing, and tragedy. Interesting and little-known facts about Lincoln surface naturally in the narrative. Desperate for a father figure, bitter over her tragedies, and unable to express herself to her therapist, Meghan writes postcards to the past president to release her fury and confusion. She feels a strong bond between Lincoln's suffering and her own, and wonders if she too can rise above it all.
The chapters that reveal Meghan's late 60's past and 1972 present are short but never spartan. Illinois cornfields are painted with vibrant and succinct detail; the joy of running is portrayed beautifully, making this an excellent choice for female athletes. Chapters read like diary entries, and move fluidly from past to present in even strides. Not all loose ends are tied up, but by the end it is clear the Meghan is on the road to emotional and physical recovery, taking small steps each day.
A bibliography would have been a welcome addition to this book. Readers who want to know more about Lincoln after this novel should be directed to Abraham Lincoln: A Writer's Life: by Harold Holzer for insights into Lincoln as a writer, and Russell Freedman's Lincoln: A Photobiography for more details about the tragic figure of Lincoln.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Best book I have read in a long time.
Review: This is the best book i have read in a long time. 16- year- old Meghan is angry with the world. She is angry at her father(whom she calls THE BANKER) because he sent her brother Killian, off to fight in the Korean War, agnst Killian's will. The Korean War has ruined Killian's way of thinking. She is angry at Dr. Take-more, and Dr. Take-less, for taking away her leg. She is mangry at the nuns in her old school for expelling her. She is angry at her day nurse for having somebody ele's baby. She is anry at Sam for trying to help her learn to run again. Throughout her hard times, she turnes to her hero, Abraham Lincon who has been dead for a while. Throughout the book she writes postcards to her her hero on anything she can find.
This compelling novel should be on the bookshelf of all teens.


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