Perma-Bound Edition ©2008 | -- |
Mothers. Fiction.
Loss (Psychology). Fiction.
Emotional problems. Fiction.
Voyages and travels. Fiction.
Interpersonal relations. Fiction.
Natalie's obsession with Adam, her glib sometime boyfriend, and the very real possibility of pregnancy compel her to take a 24-hour bus ride to Florida to find her missing mother and some answers about love. On the road, her path crosses those of others: people sitting next to her in diners, stations and bus seats. Baskin drops brief interludes, gorgeous vignettes describing the love experiences of fellow travelers, into each chapter, and readers will soon see striking similarities between Natalie's story and those of these strangers. Teens will wonder at this unusual, fascinating examination of human intersection and the myriad, imperceptible ways we relate to one another. Varied love verses head each chapter, prompting further introspection. The narrative keeps from straying too far into the metaphysical by sticking close to Natalie's unrelenting, self-destructive addiction to Adam; readers in the throes of compulsive infatuation will identify with her constant urge to check her cell for messages. Girls navigating relationships with boys, mothers, fathers and friends will gladly share Natalie's bus seat as she heads south. (Fiction. 14 & up)
Horn BookFour years after her mother left, high-school sophomore Natalie boards a bus from Connecticut to Florida determined to find her. Along the way, Natalie reflects on the relationships in her life--especially the one with first love, Adam. Natalie and the people she encounters on her journey are nuanced, real characters; this story of love, connection, and growing up is beautifully told.
ALA Booklist (Wed Oct 01 00:00:00 CDT 2008)Four years ago, Natalie Gordon's mother ran off, abandoning her child. Now a high-school sophomore, Natalie decides to follow in her footsteps and run away as well. She is running away from a toxic "love," from a possible pregnancy, and, finally, to hopefully find her mother and discover the reason behind her disappearance. As she rolls along I-95 on a Greyhound bus, Natalie meets others who recount their own stories of love and loss, gradually preparing her for her mother's saga of depression and poor choices, which leads her to acceptance of her own plight. This sad but ultimately satisfying journey is well written and interspersed with familiar quotations about love. The simple lesson that Natalie begins to learn from her seatmates and finally grasps from her mother at she must love herself first, before anyone else can love her back a lesson for all readers to absorb and understand. It is, after all, "all we know of love. . . ."
Voice of Youth AdvocatesFour years, four months, and fifteen days ago Natalie's mother walked out mid-sentence and never returned. It was not until three days ago, however, that Natalie began to wonder about what her mother left unsaid. Natalie lies to her father, purchases a bus ticket, and sets out for Florida where she hopes to find her mother and learn what was so important about love that her mother wanted to say. Along the way, Natalie meets a variety of interesting people and struggles to overcome her obsession with her own insecurities and her on-again, off-again boyfriend, who does not treat her well. Baskin's novel is a well-crafted coming-of-age story that examines the meaning of love, and as Natalie discovers, the importance of giving love without giving oneself away. Baskin takes a familiar story line and examines it in a new and interesting way that will engage readers, especially those trying to come to their own understanding of love. The people Natalie encounters along her journey have side stories that reveal their experiences with love, which helps readers explore the different kinds of love. Female readers will connect with Natalie, especially her emotional vulnerability and her desire to be truly loved by her loser boyfriend.-Alissa Lauzon.
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)In her first YA novel, Baskin's (<EMPHASIS TYPE=""ITALIC"">The Truth About My Bat Mitzvah) portrait of a teen questioning the meaning of love is as candid and alluring as her books for middle-grade readers. High-school sophomore Natalie Gordon embarks on a journey to find her mother, who abandoned her and her father more than four years ago. During her bus ride from Connecticut to Florida, Natalie recalls incidents from her childhood leading up to her mother's departure and mulls over her tumultuous relationship with an older boy, as well as her concern that she may be pregnant. Natalie meets a few people along the way—an elderly knitter, a mild-mannered hotel manager—and Baskin captures her protagonist's subtle progression from ignoring these people to opening up to some of them; vignettes about the strangers' lives drive home the universal need to be loved. These brief glimpses might leave some readers yearning to know more about these characters but, as Natalie realizes, even minor connections are what are important in life: “Even the temporary, even the transient, even the people who you are never going to see again but who exist because we need them to, because we are human.” Ages 14–up. <EMPHASIS TYPE=""ITALIC"">(Aug.)
School Library Journal (Mon Sep 01 00:00:00 CDT 2008)Gr 7 Up-Natalie's mother left in mid-sentence. At least that is what Natalie remembers. Now four years, four months, and fifteen days later, the 16-year-old is traveling on a bus from Connecticut to Florida to ask her mother exactly what she had meant to say. The teen remembers that it was something about love, and, in her present predicament, she really needs to know. She is in a one-sided obsessive relationship with Adam, with whom she experiences her "ultimate passage into womanhood"; she has alienated her best friend; and her father thinks that she has gone skiing in Vermont. During the trip, Natalie encounters a variety of people with whom she briefly interacts, but who leave an impression on her. Their stories are inserted into the narrative as cameos, and she comes to understand that she can be loved for who she isand not because she was a girl whose mother did not love her enough to stay. A moving coming-of-age story. Sharon Morrison, Southeastern Oklahoma State University, Durant, OK
Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books
Kirkus Reviews
Wilson's High School Catalog
Horn Book
ALA Booklist (Wed Oct 01 00:00:00 CDT 2008)
Voice of Youth Advocates
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
School Library Journal (Mon Sep 01 00:00:00 CDT 2008)
And everything she had made: a lopsided clay bowl with the image of a tiny painted pineapple from her ceramic workshop days, a collage of family pictures cut in various sizes and shapes, pasted together and framed. She spent weeks on that. All the pressed wildflowers she had collected and laminated between sheets of clear plastic to last forever. And me.
Me, she left behind.
She walked out mid-sentence, before she finished what she was about to say.
It was a long time ago already, four years. Four years, four months, and fifteen days to be exact. And for four years, four months, and twelve days, I didn't think for one second about what she never finished telling me. I gave no thought at all to her unfinished sentence. I suppose it is like being in a car accident. You don’t think about something as trivial as the conversation you were having at the moment of impact. Not until weeks later, if at all. It comes to you in daydream one day as you are remembering the crash, that awful crumbling-metal noise, and if you begin to reconstruct the instant at all, it may not be for months, or in my case, years.
At first all I cared about was that she was gone. I wrote her letters. I made her Mother's Day gifts. When she had been gone sixteen months and seven days, I sewed her an orange dinosaur pillow in FACs class. I cried at night, and at sad TV shows, and, for some unknown reason, during first-aid filmstrips shown in gym class on rainy days. And then I stopped.
Because all things need to come to an end. Good things and bad things.
But then just recently I started to remember and I began to reconstruct. And wonder: if only I had let her say what it was she was about to tell me, would everything have been different? Would I be in this situation?
My mother stopped mid-sentence. She was in mid-thought, about to tell me something.
She was talking about love.
At the Stamford bus station, there is a little newsstand with chips and candy and gum, stuff like that. I should load up on snacks, I am thinking. I don't have anything I am going to need, except money, and not that much of that. The ticket was a hundred and twenty-six dollars, one way. When I called a few days ago to get the schedule, I found out how expensive the trip would be, and how long it would take. Twenty-four hours on a bus. I can't imagine that. I'll need some stuff to eat and drink, I guess. I should have made myself something at home, a sandwich or two, but I didn't think of it.
It's early. Way early, especially for a Saturday morning. It's not even seven thirty. And this kid working behind the newsstand isn't paying attention; he's reading a book. I've been standing here for a while. Sometimes the world reminds me of how invisible I am.
My dad tells me it's because my voice is too quiet, even when I'm shouting. He says it's loud enough, but the timbre's too soft, as if it were at a different frequency, like there's something wrong with it and nobody hears me.
"Excuse me," I say again, a second time. The boy who works at this newsstand is at that age. Not young, not old, so I don’t know how to address him, to get his attention. Mister? Kid?
Hey, you seems rude.
"Hello there," I try. "Sir?"
Sir?
How stupid is that?
He looks up and smiles, like I just made a joke, when joking is the furthest thing from my mind. He is annoying me already.
"What can I get you?" he says. He lowers his book. I see he is wearing an orange T-shirt so faded its softness is almost visible. He hikes his jeans up over his skinny hips as he steps up to the counter. I see he is wearing a rope necklace around his neck, with one white shell that sits right in that spot, that little dip in a boy's neck that always seems a little too intimate to be looking at.
"Um . . . I’m not sure," I say, looking over everything, which all looks really unhealthy and fairly sickening.
"Stuff for your trip?" he asks me.
"Yeah." I nod. My trip.
"Where are you going?"
And when he asks me that, I know I am going to lie even before I open my mouth. Like I am trying it on for size, testing out my abilities.
"North Dakota," I say.
"North Dakota, huh?" He smiles.
This guy is flirting with me, I think. I used to like this, but ever since Adam flirting has taken on a whole new meaning. In a way, it's like I know what it means now. I know what can happen, and I don’t know what I want from it anymore.
"That’s a pretty long trip," he says.
I want to smile back, but suddenly I feel a wave of nausea. Maybe from looking at the candy, or from this older man, who comes up beside me and reeks of cigarettes. Or maybe it's something else entirely thatscares me even more.
"Forget it," I say quickly to the boy. "I don’t want anything."And I hurry away.
At least this is one of those big buses, the kind you get for really long, expensive school field trips. The kind with upholstered seats and little TV screens every few rows. But the screens are blank. So far the seat next to me is empty. I am doing a silent prayer that it stays this way all the way to Florida.
Excerpted from All We Know of Love by Nora Raleigh Baskin
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“Unusual, fascinating examination of human intersection and the myriad, imperceptible ways we relate to one another.” — Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
When Natalie was eleven, her mother walked out mid-sentence and never came back. Now Natalie is almost sixteen and struggling with a toxic relationship, so she sets out on a bus trip to find her mother and figure out love. To her surprise, she meets people with stories like her own, stories about giving love and getting lost in the desire to be wanted. Acclaimed middle-grade novelist Nora Raleigh Baskin makes her young adult debut with a deeply resonant novel about secrets held and secrets shared, about having the courage to uncover all we know — and don’t know — of love.