Otherwise Known as Possum
Otherwise Known as Possum
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Annotation: Possum Porter has had it with change. First she lost Mama, leaving a hole nothing can fill. And now, instead of trying to return to some kind of normal, Daddy's sending Possum to school--a real school, where you have to wear SHOES.
 
Reviews: 5
Catalog Number: #5900019
Format: Publisher's Hardcover
Common Core/STEAM: Common Core Common Core
Copyright Date: 2017
Edition Date: 2017 Release Date: 02/28/17
ISBN: 0-545-92795-1
ISBN 13: 978-0-545-92795-6
Dewey: Fic
Language: English
Reviews:
Horn Book

After her mother dies, eleven-year-old Possum mourns by rejecting any further changes to her life. She doesn't want to attend school, show interest in her best friend's crush, or even imagine that her father might be growing sweet on another woman. Laso captures both Possum's internal angst and the day-to-day realities of her 1930s life in the rural Deep South with gentle humor and poignant empathy.

Kirkus Reviews

The passage of time, a contest, and good friends help a grieving 11-year-old move on from the death of her mother and baby brother. In the autumn of 1932, bowing to community pressure, Possum's father sends her to school for the first time. This likable, capable child has been home-schooled well. She's sure she already knows enough. Besides, she wants no more changes in her life. At school, she must share a desk with a jealous fellow student who suggests that her father is sweet on the new Yankee teacher, who insists on calling her LizBetty. It's almost intolerable—but there's an essay contest. Winning will not only get her the beautiful book of fairy tales she covets, it will prove she knows enough to stay home. Possum's first-person voice is convincing, full of metaphors reflecting her rural Southern mountain background. Interspersed with the narrative covering the three months up to the end of the contest and Christmas are essays written by Possum, her rival, Mary Grace, and her friends Tully and June May. With distinctive, fleshed-out, mostly white characters, awkward beginning romances, and a satisfying resolution, this growing-up story seems both familiar and fresh. Laso's posthumously published first novel goes down smooth as sweet tea. (Historical fiction. 8-12)

Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)

This warm work of historical fiction takes readers to the Hoover-era South, where times are hard for all and particularly tough for LizBetty -Possum- Porter, who yearns for things to be -like when they-d been perfect,- back before her mother died in childbirth. Still, Possum, -past eleven and a half, working on twelve,- seems to have enough grit to carry her through life-s changes, from her family-s sadness to worries about a newly arrived -Yankee devil- teacher who seems sweet on her father and wants Possum to go to school, even though -Momma didn-t want my learnin- boxed into that schoolhouse.- With formal schooling comes an awakening on more than one front, as Possum navigates changing friendships, awkward love, and her own healing heart. Laso saturates her debut novel with fresh figurative language that shapes her characters (-I felt like dirt on a worm belly, only worse-) and strongly evokes Possum-s world. Sadly, this is also Laso-s last work; she died while completing final revisions in 2015. Ages 8-12. Agent: Heather Schroeder, Compass Talent. (Feb.)

School Library Journal (Tue Nov 01 00:00:00 CDT 2016)

Gr 4-6 Eleven-year-old LizBetty Porter, better known as Possum, loses her mother and newborn baby brother. Like most tweens, Possum thinks she has all the answers. In her worldview, if she remains at home, her life will be the same as it was before her mother died. She will not attend school, because she already knows everything. Instead, she will be a companion to her distraught father. Even when neighbors try to help by bringing food or providing company, Possum does her best to discourage them. But change comes. Possum is forced to go to school and must share a desk with a stuck-up girl named Mary Grace. Quickly, Possum becomes aware that her pretty teacher is interested in her father. As the tale unfolds in vignettes and episodes, some of her beliefs and attitudes undergo dramatic reversals. This coming-of-age novel takes place in 1932, in Depression-era Appalachia. Folksy wisdom shared by various secondary characters and the natural beauty and simplicity of the environment help Possum overcome her grief. But more life-affirming than scenery is the support of caring friends and neighbors who Possum finally allows into her painful world and who permit her broken heart to start to mend. VERDICT A tender grief story that will appeal to fans of Ali Benjamin's The Thing About Jellyfish.Lillian Hecker, Town of Pelham Public Library, NY

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Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books
Horn Book
Kirkus Reviews
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
School Library Journal (Tue Nov 01 00:00:00 CDT 2016)
Word Count: 49,044
Reading Level: 5.5
Interest Level: 3-6
Accelerated Reader: reading level: 5.5 / points: 8.0 / quiz: 189092 / grade: Middle Grades
Reading Counts!: reading level:5.7 / points:11.0 / quiz:Q77124
Lexile: 890L
Every change, even tiny ones like being woken early on a Sunday, could be trouble. I did not want one more freckle to fall off my knee for fifty years. At least."We're going to church." "Why come, Daddy?" I'm partial to the singing and rainbow windows though not the wearing of shoes.Daddy wiped his damp brow with one of the kerchiefs I washed for him weekly and finally answered my why come. "Let's say we're going to thank God for autumn and pray for cooler weather. Plus, you can thank Him that I haven't found wherever you had Traveler put those shoes of yours." I'm of no mind about people's feet one way or another, but GrandNam made sure I had shoes in church. Though I reckon God knew what my toes looked like, and so did Preacher, as he saw 'em plenty when I helped Daddy build the choir risers. On that sweltery September Sunday, Daddy and me and my bare feet walked up the silent, hot, country road with no more words needed between us. I felt that we would present a united front to the Town Ladies in front of God and all, and they would see how things are. That he and I were doin' just fine and didn't need anymore of their fixing.


Excerpted from Otherwise Known As Possum by Maria D. Laso
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.

A heart-expanding debut that introduces the most charming, mischievous, unforgettable heroine since Scout Finch.

Possum Porter has had it with change. First she lost Mama, leaving a hole nothing can fill. And now, instead of trying to return to some kind of normal, Daddy's sending Possum to school. A real school, where you have to wear SHOES. Where some Yankee teacher will try to erase all the useful things Mama taught Possum during their lessons at home.So Possum comes up with a plan. If she can prove that she already knows everything worth knowing, Daddy will let her quit school and stay where she belongs. She won't have to deal with snooty classmates, or worry about tarnishing Mama's memory. But unfortunately, Possum doesn't shoot to the top of the class like she expected. Even worse, the unmarried Yankee teacher seems to have her eyes on someone . . . Possum's Daddy. With time running out, Possum decides to do something drastic to get away from school-and get Daddy out of Ms. Arthington's clutches-or risk losing everything that's keeping her broken heart glued together.


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