The Golden Day
The Golden Day
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Perma-Bound Edition ©2015--
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Candlewick Press
Annotation: The Vietnam War rages overseas, but back at home, in a year that begins with the hanging of one man and ends with the drowning of another, eleven school girls embrace their own chilling history when their teacher abruptly goes missing on a field trip.
 
Reviews: 8
Catalog Number: #98651
Format: Perma-Bound Edition
Special Formats: Inventory Sale Inventory Sale
Publisher: Candlewick Press
Copyright Date: 2015
Edition Date: 2015 Release Date: 04/28/15
Pages: 149 pages
ISBN: Publisher: 0-7636-7679-9 Perma-Bound: 0-605-86142-0
ISBN 13: Publisher: 978-0-7636-7679-7 Perma-Bound: 978-0-605-86142-8
Dewey: Fic
LCCN: 2012947715
Dimensions: 21 cm.
Language: English
Reviews:
Horn Book

Spare and well written, this slim novel covers the days following a teacher's disappearance during a class outing. Eleven girls must make their way back to school where they are determined to keep their teacher's rendezvous with the local park's gardener a secret. The book's chilling atmosphere and mature tone are best suited for older readers.

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

Blending mystery with coming-of-age themes, Dubosarsky-s novel, set in 1967 at an Australian all-girls school, explores a class-s response to the unexplained disappearance of their teacher. Miss Renshaw, lover of poetry and hater of capital punishment, takes her group of 11 -little girls- on a field trip to visit a public memorial garden and -think about death.- There they meet an odd groundskeeper named Morgan, who leads them into a cave to see ancient Aboriginal paintings. The girls exit safely, but Miss Renshaw and Morgan do not reappear, and the girls return to school as the tide sweeps in. The incident, later reported to authorities, bonds the girls as each faces bewilderment, guilt, and grief when it becomes clear their teacher will not likely return. Dubosarsky (The Word Snoop) subtly shows the impact of the tragedy through fragments of conversations, observations, and memories, while expertly sketching a cast of vulnerable, inquisitive children and ridiculous authority figures. Laced with humor amid a steady feeling of dread, the atmospheric narrative chillingly evokes lurking forces capable of tarnishing even the most golden and innocent of days. Ages 12-up. (Aug.)

Starred Review ALA Booklist

Starred Review The classic Australian film Picnic at Hanging Rock finds its literary equivalent in fellow Aussie Dubosarsky's dark, languid look into the inscrutable wells of secrecy to be found in little girls. In the shadow of the Vietnam War, 11 bored Australian schoolgirls are taken on a short field trip to the local gardens by their idealistic teacher. Together with the teacher's apparent paramour, the girls are led to a seaside cave wherein the two adults vanish forever. When the girls are repeatedly questioned about the disappearance, their own self-interest compels them to stay silent and senselessly guard the truth, until the keeping of the secret, not the secret itself, becomes the most important thing. In a stunning feat of perspective, Dubosarsky inhabits all 11 girls at once, snaking through a thousand small joys and triumphs and fears and petty grudges as they absorb life's bleakest truths as well as their own complicity in them: "Their eyes were clear but their hearts were dishonest." Reminiscent of Janne Teller's Nothing (2010), this is a masterful look at children's numb surprise to the most unsavory of adult developments. Though it's not really a surprise, is it? They knew all along that the world was full of terrible things.

Word Count: 30,195
Reading Level: 4.8
Interest Level: 5-9
Accelerated Reader: reading level: 4.8 / points: 4.0 / quiz: 159627 / grade: Middle Grades+
Reading Counts!: reading level:4.4 / points:8.0 / quiz:Q61098
Lexile: 720L

“Chillingly evokes lurking forces capable of tarnishing even the most golden and innocent of days.” — Publishers Weekly (starred review)

When their teacher goes missing during an outing, eleven girls grapple with the aftermath in this haunting, exquisitely told psychological mystery. What actually happened in the seaside cave that day? And who can they tell about it? Part gripping thriller, part ethereal tale of innocence lost, The Golden Day is a poignant study of fear and friendship, and of what it takes to come of age with courage.


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