Book Descriptions
for Memory by Margaret Mahy
From Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC)
In the middle of the night, Jonny finds himself in an almost deserted part of the city with little but a hangover to remind him how he got there. He encounters Sophie, whose confusion stems from her advanced age. Because they need one another for entirely different reasons, Jonny takes refuge in Sophie's place. Midst the daily chaos of Sophie's existence, he begins to confront some realities of his sister's earlier death. The technical brilliance of Mahy's earlier fiction shines in this wholly original novel: superior characterizations, effective dialogue, subtle uses of imagery, and judiciously interwoven elements of romance and of wit. Set in New Zealand, some contemporary societal concerns are apparent for readers to consider or overlook, just as in life. The life insights realized by Mahy's characters emerge no more easily or less authentically than in reality. (Age 14-adult)
CCBC Choices 1988. © Cooperative Children's Book Center, Univ. of Wisconsin - Madison, 1988. Used with permission.
From the Publisher
On the fifth anniversary of his sister's death, nineteen-year-old Jonny Dart is still troubled by guilt and an imperfect memory of the accident that took her life. He goes searching for the only other witness to the fatal event, his sister's best friend. But instead of finding the answers he's looking for, he finds Sophie -- a gentle old woman suffering from Alzheimer's disease, who teaches him about remembering and about loss.
Publisher description retrieved from Google Books.