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THE UNNAMEABLES
Author: Booraem, Ellen
Review Date: SEPTEMBER 01, 2008
Publisher:Harcourt
Pages: 336
Price (hardback): $$16.00
Publication Date: 10/1/2008 0:00:00
ISBN: 978-0-15-206368-9
ISBN (hardback): 978-0-15-206368-9
Category: CHILDREN'S
A star is assigned to books of unusual merit, determined by the editors of Kirkus Reviews.
On Island, "thou art thy name." At age 14, residents receive their names and their vocations from the Council. A cook becomes Cook, a tanner becomes Tanner and everyone follows the rules set forth in Capability C. Craft's Frugall Compendium of Home Arts and Farme Chores (1680). Thirteen-year-old foundling Medford Runyuin hopes to be designated Carver, like his foster father. He also hopes no one will discover the Unnameable objects he's created and hidden under his bed: They could cause his exile to Mainland forever. The Council puts off naming him, however, and he must continue to work hard for acceptance. When someone nameless and possibly Unnameable enters his life, all his plans—and the islanders' way of life—could be in for drastic changes…but after 300 years, is that necessarily a bad thing? Booraem's debut is an ever-surprising, genre-defying page-turner. Realistic characters deal with philosophical problems in vivid, flowing prose that is evocative and often funny. A sort of combination of witch-trial–era Salem and The Giver, this book offers a treat with nearly every page turn. (Fantasy. 10-14)
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January 15, 2010 - I still remember the first time I heard Spenser's voice ring out in the opening chapter of The Godwulf Manuscript (1973), as he razzes the college president who's trying to hire him. What's this guy's problem? I thought. Why does he have such an attitude? The attitude, I soon learned, had deep roots...Part of it was a temperamental similarity to Spenser's creator, Robert B. Parker, who died on Jan. 18th at age 77.
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