Sep 192011
 
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Cover image of Steinbeck's Ghost by Lewis Buzbee 66. Steinbeck’s Ghost by Lewis Buzbee
Publication: Feiwel & Friends (September 2, 2008), Hardcover, 352pp / ISBN 0312373287
Genre: MG/YA Fiction, Magical Realism

Read: July 4, 2011
Source: Paperback Swap

Summary from Amazon:

It’s been two months since Travis’s family moved to a development so new that it seems totally unreal. His parents are working harder now, to pay for it all, and Travis is left to fend for himself.

There’s one place, though, where Travis can still connect with his old life: the Salinas library. Travis and his family used to go there together every Saturday, but now he bikes to it alone, re-reading his favorite books.

It’s only natural that Travis likes the work of author John Steinbeck—after all, Salinas is Steinbeck’s hometown. But that can’t explain why Travis is suddenly seeing Steinbeck’s characters spring to life. There’s the homeless man in the alley behind the library, the line of figures at the top of a nearby ridge, the boy who writes by night in an attic bedroom. Travis has met them all before—as a reader. But why are they here now? And how?

As Travis struggles to solve this mystery, budget cuts threaten his library. And so, he embarks on a journey through Steinbeck’s beautiful California landscape, looking for a way to save his safe haven. It’s only then that he begins to sort out fact from fiction, discovering the many ways a story can come alive—and stumbling into a story Steinbeck might have started, and Travis needs to complete.

Here is a mystery that delves deeply into the ways that books take us, one at a time, out into the vast world.

Review

This review has taken me AGES to figure out how to write, mostly because it’s about one of those books that I love a lot and my words just disappear when trying to describe it and I’m left hugging it tightly and rocking in a corner somewhere. It’s just…great! Fantastic! Wonderful! You know? No superlative really fits, because it’s all those things but in a really quiet way.

Steinbeck’s Ghost isn’t one of those “hey I am so awesome come and read me” kind of books. It reminds me of E.L. Konigsburg’s books, really, with the friendship and the loving libraries and the kid characters who are just slightly smarter than you’d think they’d be. And the quiet awesomeness of it all. It’s also got a toe dipped into the magical realism genre, which is neat. Continue reading »

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