The Blossoming Universe of Violet Diamond

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مشارکت: عنوان و توضیح کوتاه هر کتاب را ترجمه کنید این ترجمه بعد از تایید با نام شما در سایت نمایش داده خواهد شد.
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فرمت کتاب

ebook

تاریخ انتشار

2014

Lexile Score

670

Reading Level

3

ATOS

4.3

Interest Level

4-8(MG)

نویسنده

Brenda Woods

شابک

9781101585016
  • اطلاعات
  • نقد و بررسی
  • دیدگاه کاربران
کورتا اسکات کینگ برنده افتخار برندا وودز، داستان تکان دهنده و هیجان انگیز دختری که در نهایت طرف افریقایی امریکایی خانواده خود را ملاقات میکند، به بررسی نژادپرستی میپردازد و اینکه چقدر این حس را دارد که یک پرنده است و از خانواده های مختلف تجلیل میکند. وایولت یه دختر باهوش، بامزه با موهای قهوه ای و یه خانواده مو بور مادرش سفید پوست است و پدرش که قبل از به دنیا امدن فوت کرد سیاه پوست بود. او به یک مدرسه سفید می رود جایی که گاهی احساس می کند مثل یک برگ قهوه ای روی یک توده برف است. از این خسته شده که مردم ازش می‌پرسن که ایا به فرزندی پذیرفته شده. حالا که ویولت یازده ساله، تصمیم می‌گیره که وقتش باشه که درباره‌ی میراث افریقایی‌اش از امریکا یاد بگیره. و علیرغم شروع سخت تلاش برای احیای طرف پدرش از خانواده، او می تواند اعتماد به نفسش را به عنوان قطعات پازل زندگی او در نهایت شروع به نزدیک شدن به هم احساس کند. خوانندگان ویولت را تشویق کرده و هنگامی که او ریشه هایش را کشف می کند، شادی اش را با او سهیم می شوند.

نقد و بررسی

DOGO Books
JC113 - The Blossoming Universe Of Violet Diamond by Brenda Woods is a exciting & thrilling but kind of sad or emotional book, tells about a girl named Violet who lost her father in a car accident. She is having bad dreams and can never sleep at night. She just wishes he could be there with her & her mom. This story tells about how Violet doesn't know about her grandmother (which is her dads mother). She wants to learn more about her so she asks her mom if she can visit her grandmother at her art exhibit and she said that was fine. She was so excited! Her grandmother's exhibit was in Seattle, so her mom took her there. Her mom lets her go to Violets grandmother's house in Las Vegas. She goes there with her and she gets to stat there for two weeks! When her grandmother is cooking her famous mashed potatoes, Violet is in her room and she hears a loud "thud"! I would totally recommend this book because it is a really good book! You should also read this book because it is amazingly funny and could be emotional for some people, but so hilarious! Find out more by reading the book!

Publisher's Weekly

October 28, 2013
Woods (Saint Louis Armstrong Beach) returns with the story of 11-year old Violet Diamond, who is struggling with her biracial identity; the novel handles big-picture topics well, but falters with its energy and authenticity. Violet is the daughter of an African-American father, who died in a car accident two months before her birth, and a white mother. Violet’s Seattle suburb is largely white, and Violet feels angry and confused by the puzzlement people display when they see her with her white family. Motivated by a dream about her father, Violet reaches out to cultivate a relationship with her paternal grandmother and her father’s family, whom she has never met. The subdued, meandering nature of the story and Violet’s overly formal voice can be difficult to connect to, but Woods deftly raises complex issues of race and identity and leaves them open for discussion: whether race matters, what makes a family, how it feels to be different, and what it means to be biracial. “To white people,” Violet thinks, “I’m half black. To black people, I’m half white.... Is that what I am, a percentage?” Ages 8–12.



Kirkus

Starred review from November 15, 2013
Violet's a bright, engaging biracial preteen, resigned to a "predictable summer of boring nothing" in small-town Washington; happily, for her and for readers, she couldn't be more wrong. Violet, 11, appreciates her loving family--busy neonatologist mom; sister, Daisy, 17; mom's lively, ex-hippie parents--she's just tired of explaining she belongs. She wouldn't have to if her dad, an African-American doctor, hadn't died in a car accident before her birth. In mostly white Moon Lake, Violet's a rarity; her one black friend attends a different school. Adopting a kitten is fun, but lightening her hair? Big mistake. (It was supposed to look "sun-kissed," like Daisy's--not orange.) Although Roxanne, her dad's mother, a famous artist, has refused contact (she has her reasons), Violet engineers a meeting at a Seattle gallery, persuading her mom to take her. Rebuffed at first, Violet persists until Roxanne invites her for a visit, and what was frozen begins to thaw. Both families are stable, intelligent and well-intentioned, but forgiveness and trust require contact; healing can't happen at a distance. Violet's no tragic mulatto--she'd survive estrangement, but in reconnecting with her dad's family and cultural roots, she'll thrive, fulfill her vast potential and, in doing so, enrich both families' lives across the racial divide. Infused with humor, hope and cleareyed compassion--a fresh take on an old paradigm. (Fiction. 8-12)

COPYRIGHT(2013) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.



School Library Journal

Starred review from March 1, 2014

Gr 4-6-Violet Diamond's father died in a car accident two months before her birth, and the 11-year-old has always felt that a piece of her was missing. As the daughter of an African American father and Caucasian mother, she is frustrated with narrow racial assumptions directed at her by those living in her predominantly white neighborhood in Seattle. After eavesdropping on an eye-opening family conversation, Violet digs around and finds out that Roxanne Diamond, the estranged paternal grandmother she's never met, is having an art exhibition in Seattle, and the resourceful tween vows to meet her. Complex family history renders their first meeting awkward and tense, but Roxanne genuinely wants to be involved in her granddaughter's life. Violet travels with her grandmother to Los Angeles to meet her father's relatives and better understand her African American heritage. Violet's charming quirks, which include nighttime wishing rituals and keeping a mental catalogue of sophisticated vocabulary words, prove endearing. In this quiet story, Woods's admirably touches upon profound issues related to identity and race and tenderly conveys intergenerational bonds.-Lalitha Nataraj, Escondido Public Library, CA

Copyright 2014 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.



Booklist

December 1, 2013
Grades 4-7 Eleven-year-old Violet Diamond feels as though she doesn't belongshe's a brown leaf on a pile of white snow. A biracial child, she never knew her father, who died before she was born. Violet is tired of the strange looks from people who don't understand her background, so she researches her family on her father's side and learns that her artist grandmother will be visiting Seattle. Violet jumps at the chance to meet her and soon feels belonging and acceptance as she gains answers about the dad she never knew, thereby giving her a far more confident sense of self. Woods' novel has a lot of heart, and Violet is someone many readers will relate to. Side characters, too, are well developed, and while Violet's reconciliation with her long-lost grandmother comes a bit too easily, Violet's warm journey of self-discovery is realistic. A sweet, heartfelt tale.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2013, American Library Association.)




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