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Becoming Naomi Leon (Americas Award for Children's and Young Adult Literature. Commended (Awards)) (Hardcover)
by PAM MUÑOZ RYAN
Category:
Family, Story, Award-winning books, Ages 9-12, Children's book |
Market price: ¥ 198.00
MSL price:
¥ 168.00
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In Stock |
MSL rating:
Good for Gifts
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MSL Pointer Review:
This is a story of strength, devotion and the search for family. |
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Author: PAM MUÑOZ RYAN
Publisher: Scholastic Press
Pub. in: September, 2004
ISBN: 0439269695
Pages: 246
Measurements: 8.3 x 5.8 x 0.9 inches
Origin of product: USA
Order code: BC00045
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- Awards & Credential -
American Award for Children's and Young Adult Literature |
- MSL Picks -
Naomi, and Owen are happy at Avocado Acres Trailer Rancho until the day the children's mother arrives. After being gone so long that they don't recognize her, Skyla enters their lives, lavishing attention and presents on fifth-grade Naomi; however, she never seems to include Owen. After several weeks, the truth about her reappearance becomes apparent. Clive, her new boyfriend, wants Naomi to live with them and become the permanent baby-sitter for his daughter. The ensuing custody battle forces Gram, Naomi, Owen and a neighbor couple to make a hasty trip to Mexico to look for Santiago, the children's biological father and a well-known wood-carver. After a physically and emotionally exhausting search, they finally find him at the annual Christmas festival in their ancestral village. Even though the children will continue to live with their great-grandmother, this reunion gives them the reassurance of their father's love and support. Ryan has written a moving book about family dynamics. While she explores the youngsters' Mexican heritage and gives a vivid picture of life in and the art of Oaxaca, her story is universal, showing the strong bonds and love that make up an extended family. All of the characters are well drawn, and readers will share Naomi's fear until the judge makes the final decision about her future.
Target readers:
Kids aged up 8
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PAM MUÑOZ RYAN has written over 25 books for young people including the novel, Esperanza Rising, winning of the Pura Belpré Medal, the Jane Addams Peace Award, and ALA Top Ten Best Book for Young Adults, and an Americas Award Honor Book. Her novel Riding Freedom has garnered many awards, including the national Willa Cather Award and the California Young Reader Medal. She was born and raised in Bakersfield, California, and received her bachelor's and master's degrees at San Diego State University. She now lives in north San Diego County with her husband and four children.
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Naomi Soledad León Outlaw has had a lot to contend with in her young life, her name for one. Then there are her clothes (sewn in polyester by Gram), her difficulty speaking up, & her status at school as "nobody special." But according to Gram's self-prophecies, most problems can be overcome with positive thinking. Luckily, Naomi also has her carving to strengthen her spirit. And life with Gram & her little brother, Owen, is happy & peaceful. That is, until their mother reappears after 7 years of being gone, stirring up all sorts of questions & challenging Naomi to discover who she really is.
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E. R. Bird (MSL quote), USA
<2006-12-26 00:00>
Esperanza Rising was okay. It wasn't the best book I'd ever read, nor did it leave an indelible mark on my heart and mind. After reading it through I felt that author Pam Munoz Ryan was a fine n' dandy writer, but that it was probably unlikely that she'd produce a book that would really make me sit up and take notice. When I start reading a children's book with a mild prejudice already established in my mind (as there was when I picked up Becoming Naomi Leon) it takes remarkably good writing to bash that prejudice into soft mushy pulp. And bash this book did. By its end I was flabbergasted. I went into this novel with the vague dread that it would read like so many other works of fiction that are ostensibly "good" for children. I worried that it would be beautifully written and dull as day old dishwater. Instead, it was interesting, bright, cheery, but with just enough reality and cynicism to make you feel that Naomi's fight was one worth battling out. In short, I've been completely seduced by "Becoming Naomi Leon". It is perhaps the underrated children's novel of 2004.
Naomi begins her book with the chilling statement that she can now point out the exact moment that her sense of peace and security began to unravel like those cartoons where a dog wearing a sweater gets a string from his shirt caught in some way. "Pretty soon the poor dog is bare to its skin, shivering, and all that had kept it warm is nothing more than a bedraggled string". And it all began the night her mother came to town. Naomi had been living a nice quiet life with her great-grandmother (or just Gram, as she calls her) and her little brother Owen. Owen has a slight birth defect that affects his neck and voice, but otherwise he's pretty much a certified genius. Both kids were abandoned years ago by their wayward mama Terri Lynn (self-renamed as Skyla), who has just as randomly swung into town to see them. More exactly, to see Naomi. With the firm belief that she is the rightful mother of her child (Owen's physical condition jars with her), Skyla has every intention of grabbing her daughter and dragging her to Las Vegas to take care of her boyfriend's young daughter. Naomi's fright is understandable, but fortunately her Gram is a force to be reckoned with. And before our heroine knows it, she's whisked away to Mexico to briefly escape her lunatic mother and to find her missing father, wherever he may be.
Yeah, I know. It sounds a little heavy-handed. A mite bit unbelievable. A smidgen over-the-top. And with any other author, it would've been. Other reviewers of this book have complained, ludicrously, that Skyla is portrayed as almost too evil and that no such mother like this exists. Sure they do. They exist all the time. They just don't get very good press. And Skyla is beautifully tempered as a character. Some moments she's swimming in charm, buying her babies every pretty present she can think of. Other times she's slapping Naomi upside the face and making thinly disguised threats against Gram. What Ryan does to even out the more unwieldy plot elements, like these, is introduce Naomi's penchant for carving. The daughter of a carver, Naomi carves soft soaps when she can, creating doves, lions, and squirrels. This all comes to a head when she and her family travel to the fabulous (and very real) Oaxacan Night of the Radishes, where expert carvers converge to create large beautiful radishes into varying animal, biblical, and mythical scenes. Adding this detail of Naomi's personality to her otherwise soft-spoken self makes her a very real and understandable heroine.
To my mind, Becoming Naomi Leon whops Esperanza Rising's butt. It's a book that will have you alternately gripping your seat, reading with deep intensity, and laughing at its good humor. Gran alone is worth the price of admission. For a surprisingly thoughtful, intelligent, and incredibly readable book (reading this aloud to kids would work incredibly well, methinks) choose "Naomi Leon" any day of the week. A book that promotes tolerance and wisdom.
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Rogina Ruiz (MSL quote), USA
<2006-12-26 00:00>
Becoming Naomi Leon is one of the best children's books that I have read in many years. It is the touching story of a bi-cultural brother and sister abandoned by their mother and living in their Grandmother's trailer named Baby Beluga in Lemon Tree, California. Naomi is a shy, quiet girl who carves soap into animals and makes lists. Owen is an FLK (Funny Looking Kid) who dreams of bicycles and wears tape on his clothes for comfort. Grandma is a feisty, positive thinking, loving woman who tries her best to expose the children to their Mexican culture. They live in relative happiness until one day, their mother shows up. She devotes her time and gifts to Naomi, ignoring Owen in spite of his obvious desire to have her love.
As Naomi's mother spends more time in Lemon Tree, her motives for coming to see her children become threatening and Grandma and the wonderful Mexican neighbors band together to protect the children.
Becoming Naomi Leon is eloquent and moving story of an extended family, a mother that is a danger to her children, a hunt for a father that takes you to Oaxaca and the beauty there. It is simple and elegant; painful and sweet. This book will touch your heart and show you love in its purest form.
Pam Munoz Ryan has written an ageless and beautiful story that will stay with me for a very long time.
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English teacher (MSL quote), Orlando, FL
<2006-12-26 00:00>
In a word, "Glorious!"
Like Al Capone Does My Shirts, this is one of the few young adult novels that transcend the label "Young Adult" and become a highly recommended novel for anyone.
Gorgeously written with a treasure trove of figurative and poetic language, this story (told from a fifth-grader's perspective) deals with a realistic world where a mother can be mean and self-serving and not interested in at all in what's best for her children. Hopeful, sad, thoroughly rewarding, I can't recommend this book enough.
I will be using this book in my eighth grade classes this year to explore figurative language in writing, as well as international cultures, and look forward to sharing this wonderful book with my students.
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Diana (MSL quote), Oregon
<2006-12-26 00:00>
What a great upbeat book that still covers the struggles of a child of a divorced family, living in poverty, and being of a mixed race. Great read with a great ending that wasn't to unbelievable. It left you with a good feeling even though the struggles of the children were very real. Great life lessons as well as cultural lessons in this book. |
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