Birdie

Eileen Spinelli

Book - 2019

Twelve-year-old Birdie Briggs loves birds. They bring her comfort when she thinks about her dad, a firefighter who was killed in the line of duty. Life without her dad isn't easy, but at least Birdie still has Mom and Maymee, and her friends Nina and Martin. But then Maymee gets a boyfriend, Nina and Martin start dating, and Birdie's mom starts seeing a police officer. And suddenly not even her beloved birds can lift Birdie's spirits. Her world is changing, and Birdie wishes things would go back to how they were before. But maybe change, painful as it is, can be beautiful too.

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Subjects
Genres
Free verse
Published
Grand Rapids, MI : Eerdmans Books for Young Readers, an imprint of Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co 2019.
Language
English
Main Author
Eileen Spinelli (author)
Physical Description
197 pages ; 22 cm
Audience
Ages 10-14.
ISBN
9780802855138
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Review by Booklist Review

Three years ago, after Birdie's father died, she and her mother moved to her great-grandmother Maymee's small town and into her home. Twelve-year-old Birdie still mourns for her father, but change is in the air. Previously preoccupied with planning her funeral, Maymee loses her heart to a man visiting relatives nearby. To Birdie's dismay, Mom starts dating, too. And even Birdie secretly longs for her best friend, Martin, to become her boyfriend, though he has a crush on another girl. For a while, every change seems wrong to Birdie, but gradually she gains perspective on the shifts within her circle of family and friends, sorting out the temporary, awkward, or painful changes from those that feel right as time passes. Birdie's fascination with birds is as integral to the storytelling as references to her father. Written with a light hand and from Birdie's point of view, this accessible, sometimes amusing narrative comes alive through its portrayal of characters. Spinelli sorts out the three love stories deftly, from Maymee, who knows she has no time to waste, to Mom, who's willing to take another chance, to Birdie, who's relieved when her agonizing emotional fever subsides, but who ultimately sees her future differently afterwards. An engaging, perceptive novel in verse.--Carolyn Phelan Copyright 2010 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Spinelli (Love You Always) uses free verse to relay this tender and perceptive story about a 12-year-old negotiating the choppy waters of adolescence. Life is distressingly in flux for Birdie Briggs, so nicknamed for her love of birds ("there is something/ light and feathery/ in my heart/ at the idea/ that a bird/ may be weaving/ the hairs from my brush/ into its nest"). She misses her father, a firefighter who died three years earlier in the line of duty. Now, her best friend, Martin (whom, she laments, "was supposed/ to be my first boyfriend"), has a crush on a new girl in the neighborhood, and Birdie isn't thrilled that her mother has begun dating a police officer: "I just wish he'd get transferred/ to the North Pole./ Or decide to become a monk." And even her feisty widowed grandmother has found a suitor, making Birdie feel more alone. While unveiling her own frustrations and fears, Birdie's earnest narrative presents convincing portraits of these and additional sympathetic characters to shape a meaningful tale about intergenerational bonds, true friendship, and the need to embrace change. Ages 10-14. (Apr.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by School Library Journal Review

Gr 5-7-In this novel in verse, 12-year-old Roberta Briggs, called Birdie because of her love and knowledge of birds, is living with her mother and grandmother in a small Pennsylvania town, having moved there from Philadelphia three years before, following the line-of-duty death of her firefighter father. The pain of her loss has somewhat abated, and life is good, but things are changing: her best friend and Sunday Scrabble partner Martin is spending more and more time with a new girl in town, Nina; her grandmother has given up planning her own funeral in favor of a romantic relationship; and her mother's late arrivals home from work reveal a love interest Birdie is not ready to accept. She grapples with jealousy and resentment, but as new people enter her life, she comes to learn that love heals and that change can sometimes happen for the better. Humorous and poignant, Spinelli's lyrical writing, spot-on sense of small town life, and light touch make this a comforting and enjoyable read in an accessible format. VERDICT Exactly the kind of mild-conflict story parents seek for their preadolescents.-Marie Orlando, formerly at Suffolk Cooperative Library System, Bellport, NY © Copyright 2019. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Horn Book Review

In Spinellis novel in verse, Birdie, age twelve, is having a summer disrupted by love. Her live-in grandmother gets a fresh lease on life when she tumbles for the new-senior-in-town. Martin, Birdies Scrabble pal, falls for their mutual friend Nina, making Birdie realize that not only does she like Martin, but shes on the verge of liking him. Most difficult of all, Birdies mother, a widow of three years, starts dating. Birdie morphs from determinedly cheerful and accommodating to fed-up and grumpy, all the while gaining in insight and self-awareness. A contemporary small-town setting feels timeless, with ice-cream socials, church on Sunday, a benevolent police officer, and plenty of unscheduled time for kids. The potential preciousness of the narrative vignettes is mitigated by specificity and offbeat humorbaked-potato ice cream, a pet snail, fascination with an undertakers supply catalog, and a twelve-year-old who hangs out her shingle as an amateur therapist. Adept use of the present tense and first-person voice allows the alert reader to figure things out just one step ahead of Birdie. The sorrows here are convincing but non-angsty, the families troubled but functional, the narrative voice charming but not too clever. This is classic middle grade, all the better for its old-fashioned flavor. sarah ellis (c) Copyright 2019. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

For at least one young girl, a small town is a good place to navigate early crushes and long-term grief.Twelve-year-old Birdie knows everything about birds. She doesn't quite want to be one anymore, as she did when she was little, but she still drops hairs from her hairbrush onto the lawn because "there is something / light and feathery / in my heart / at the idea / that a bird / may be weaving / the hairs from my brush / into its nest." Mom and Birdie came to live with great-grandmother Maymee in tiny Hadley Falls (too small for a public library) three years ago, after Birdie's firefighter father was killed in the line of duty. The grief isn't fresh but it's ongoingas are Maymee's eccentricity (she interrupts church to identify an attractive new older worshiper), the five shelves of "lending library" in a neighbor's pantry, and classmate Loretta's preparation to become a therapist by "seeing" neighborhood kids as clients. The adults are all good, the kids occasionally grumpy but kind, and the town safe for 12-year-olds to roam. Even the pains of an unrequited crush or a new man in Mom's life come with soft places to fall. Birdie's free-verse narration is thoughtful and unhurried, and although it's interior, it shows without telling. Birdie and her family seem white by default and cover art; absence of racial markers implies that everyone is white.A gentle look at daily beauty and at heartache that's not caused by anyone doing anything wrong. (Verse fiction. 9-12) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.