Me & Emma by Elizabeth Flock
My rating (out of 5 stars):
3 stars—I liked it.
My Thoughts:
Flock gives us a child narrator that is coping with child abuse. Parts of this book were very moving, even hard to read because it made me intensely sad. The only criticism I have is the pace of the book. The beginning is very slow and then there seems to be a rush to resolution, leaving the reader with an abrupt ending.
Description from Goodreads.com:
“The title characters in Me & Emma are very
nearly photographic opposites--8-year-old Carrie, the raven-haired narrator, is
timid and introverted, while her little sister Emma is a tow-headed powerhouse
with no sense of fear. The girls live in a terrible situation: they depend on
an unstable mother that has never recovered from her husband's murder, their
stepfather beats them regularly, and they must forage on their own for food.
Stop here and you have a story told many times before, as fiction and
nonfiction in tales like Ellen Foster, or I Know Why the Caged
Bird Sings --stories in which a young girl reveals the horrors of her
childhood. Me & Emma differentiates itself with a spectacular
finish, shocking the reader and turning the entire story on its head. Through
several twists and turns the reader learns that things are not quite the way
our narrator led us to believe and everything crescendos in a way that (like
all good thrillers) immediately makes you want to go back and read the whole
book again from the start.”
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