Clementine

Ann Hood, 1956-

Book - 2023

Two years after her sister's tragic death, fourteen-year-old Clementine still struggles with overwhelming guilt and grief and feels disconnected from the world around her.

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Subjects
Genres
Children's stories
Novels
Published
New York : Penguin Workshop 2023.
Language
English
Main Author
Ann Hood, 1956- (author)
Physical Description
315 pages ; 22 cm
Audience
Ages 10 and up.
ISBN
9780593094105
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

In a spin-off of Jude Banks, Superhero, Hood turns her attention to a now slightly older Clementine, who continues to grieve the sister who died after a nut exposure. Wracked with guilt and struggling, too, with a best friend who relocated states away, Clementine leans into unhealthy coping mechanisms despite a support network that includes her mother and Jude. Like many dealing with grief, Clementine experiences feelings of isolation and a sense of numbness, which she attempts to handle through risky behavior. Importantly, Clementine represents often unseen populations--both that of bereaved siblings and of 14-year-old characters. Giving voice to these groups, Clementine runs into the same mistakes as she grapples with her grief, trying to honor her sister while reaching for contentment and joy in her life again. This seems impossible and paradoxical to Clementine, who sorts through the conundrum from a slightly different and equally important perspective as Jude's in the initial novel. Facing her own mortality, Clementine seeks external help but must ultimately dig within herself to find the courage to move forward. Like Amy Besheal's We Are All Constellations (2022) and Christine Webb's The Art of Insanity (2022), Clementine examines the most human of experiences through the lens of family disruption and loss, magnifying feelings of being adrift and what it means to grieve and come-of-age at the same time.

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

Since her younger sister Halley died from an allergic reaction to peanuts two years prior to this book's start, now-14-year-old Clementine Marsh, who cues as white, has experienced depression and grief that led to a suicide attempt. Now, she's transitioned out of her beloved Montessori and started ninth grade at a chaotic new school where she experiences bullying, slaps a smirking classmate, and believes she's seen as "the one who has lost her mind." Meanwhile, she also feels as if she's stuck in a snow globe where tears fall instead of snow. Clementine's widowed mother provides support via a residential program and therapy, a support group, a trip to see old friends, and, finally, what Clementine--whose snarky first-person narration is candid and sometimes funny--calls a "low-rent Outward Bound." The program emphasizes activity, community, and routine, but nothing really helps, especially when Clementine's mother starts dating. Balancing each of Clementine's steps forward with one back, Hood's follow-up to Jude Banks, Superhero offers a difficult, emotionally keyed portrayal of grief, depression, and suicidal ideation in which healing comes slowly, and in fits and starts. Ages 10--up. Agent: Gail Hochman, Brandt & Hochman. (May)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A teen struggles to cope with her younger sister's death in the follow-up to Jude Banks, Superhero (2021). Ever since her younger sister, Halley, died from a peanut allergy two years ago, 14-year-old Clementine Marsh has felt like the world outside is overwhelming and that she's trapped in a snow globe. Her new high school is chaotic, and gossip has made her a target of bullying. Her best friend moved to Vermont and feels like a stranger. Worst of all, her widowed mother has fallen in love. How can Clementine cope with losing Halley when it feels like she's losing her mom too? Clementine's narrative, which drifts between past and present, candidly explores depression and grief. Unfortunately, some scenes, such as Clementine's vividly recounted suicide attempt, risk triggering readers with similar struggles, and there are no mental health resources included. Realistically, Clementine's path toward healing is not linear; hopeful moments alternate with physical and verbal outbursts and periods of inertia. Readers will root for Clementine as she learns to manage her emotions with help from a support group, though Hood's dashing of potentially positive developments becomes emotionally taxing. Most secondary characters are lightly developed, but Clementine's relationship with her mother--who remains steadily supportive amid her own grief, worry, and exhaustion--is touchingly three-dimensional. Clementine reads White; secondary characters bring some diversity. An unvarnished portrait of grief and healing; approach with care. (Fiction. 12-14) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

I know how it goes in the movies because we are . . . were . . . a movie-watching family. Every Saturday night. All the Disney classics, of course, and both Parent Traps---the original and the remake---and Toy Story 1, 2, and 3 and any movies with horses or dogs in them. Mom usually slipped in one of her favorites for the second movie because she knew Halley almost always fell asleep by then, anyway. There would always be pizza during the first movie and popcorn during the second movie. We only got up from the couch to put the bag of popcorn in the microwave or get more drinks. It was the only night of the week that we were allowed soda, so even more special. In the movies, the person---the main character, usually---wakes up from her coma and there are loving faces staring down at her. A nurse scurries out of the room to find a doctor. There are tears from the grateful family. You're alive! You made it! Real life is very different from the movies. I should know this by now. In the movies, tragedy is averted, lives are saved, people get better and happier. In real life, when the main character---that would be me, Clementine Marsh, age fourteen and a half---opens her eyes, one of them kind of sticks halfway shut because there is some medical goop on them. Her throat is on fire from the tube they stuck down there in the OR and her leg aches from the big toe to the knee, like there's a tiny drummer in there banging away, hard. "Thirsty," is the first thing I manage to say. It comes out like sandpaper. There is no scurrying nurse, no grateful family. There is just Mom, looking exhausted. "Oh, Clementine," she says in the saddest voice ever. "Why?" Even if I could talk, I wouldn't be able to answer the question. How can I ever explain what happened last night? What I was thinking and why I did what I did? "Water," I croak instead. Mom gets up and pours me some water from the mauve plastic pitcher by the bed. She sticks a straw in a cup and holds it to my lips while I sip, managing to stroke my hair with her free hand. "I wish I knew what you were thinking," she says when I flop my head back down on the pillow. I close my eyes again. They're scratchy, too. I try to imagine my whole body slowly turning into sandpaper, but Mom interrupts. "You're in the psych ward," she whispers, like she's embarrassed. My eyes fly open. "What? Why?" "They're trying to find a place for you that's . . . nicer," Mom says. "I called Strawberry Fields, so maybe you can go back there." I can't talk and I can't think straight. Psych ward? Strawberry Fields? What am I missing? I look at Mom's pretty, tired face for clues. But I only see worry and sadness. Her eyes are red from crying or not sleeping or both. She's got her hair pulled back in a messy ponytail and not a drop of makeup on. Mom sighs and says, again, "Oh, Clementine. Why?" Where do I even begin? Excerpted from Clementine by Ann Hood All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.