
Call Me Hope
فرمت کتاب
ebook
تاریخ انتشار
2009
Lexile Score
720
Reading Level
3
ATOS
4.6
Interest Level
4-8(MG)
نویسنده
Gretchen Olsonشابک
9780316085458
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی

nezzo - This book is about a girl. She is constantly bullied by one person in her life. Her mother. Her mother calls her 'Hopeless' and other mean things. With the help of the characters in "Life Is Beautiful", a movie about the Holocaust, she creates a point system. With the field trip ahead, working at Next to New, and doing some stuff her mother doesn't like, Hope tries to cope with her verbally abusive mother. Note: This has some minor bad language used repeatedly to emphasize Hope's mother's abuse.

April 23, 2007
A
nyone who equates child abuse only with physical blows may think in broader terms after reading this moving story of a sixth grader tormented by her mother’s hurtful words. Hope, whose father left when she was a baby (because she “cried all the time,” according to her mother), has been called stupid so many times she gets a “stinkin’ stomachache” every time she hears the word. She can’t seem to do anything to please her mother, but luckily there are others—Hope’s teacher, her school counselor and classmate Brody, for instance—who believe she does have value. Hope reaches a turning point after making friends with two women who run a used clothing store. Deeply affected by their kindness and inspired by Anne Frank’s diary, Hope gradually begins to believe in herself, even when her mother dishes out her cruelest punishment by not allowing Hope to participate in the Outdoor School program. Without giving too pat a solution to Hope’s internal and external conflicts, Olson (Joyride
) provides signs that her protagonist’s future will be considerably brighter than her past. Children who can identify with Hope’s predicament will find solace in this book as well as tips for survival, listed by Hope in the final chapter. Ages 8-12.

May 1, 2007
Gr 4-6-Hope is a bright 11-year-old, eager to please and looking forward to a week at camp with her 6th-grade class. With ingenuity, she manages to fulfill the requirements, despite lack of support at home, but she has not fully reckoned with her unhappy and punitive mother. Anything can set Mom off, and when it does, a scorching tirade and cruel punishment follow. Hopeless is the kindest word that her mother hurls at her. This portrait of a verbally abusive parent is acute and painful. Readers will cheer for Hope as she finds ways to comfort herself and to shore up her damaged self-esteem. Especially important is her new friendship with two older women who run a thrift shop where Hope works to earn the boots and clothes she needs for the trip. When Mom punishes her by refusing to let her go to camp, it takes the intervention of caring adults to give her back her dreams and to stop the abuse. While Hope is away, her mother enrolls in parenting classes. That a troubled adult would turn around in one short week is a fairy-tale ending, but this didactic story is nonetheless a compelling and rewarding read. The back matter contains a list of Hope Notesideas for ways that readers can build their own resiliency."Carolyn Lehman, Humboldt State University, Arcata, CA"
Copyright 2007 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

March 15, 2007
Eleven-year-old Hope leads a seemingly normal life. She is looking forward to sixth grade, and the promise of Outdoor School, an annual camping trip that happens in the spring. She is thrilled when she lands a job at a used clothing store, and manages to attract the attention of a cute boy from her class. But Hope's self-serving mother, Darlene, who frequently flies into rages, calling Hope "stupid" and "hopeless," always manages to overshadow everything good in Hope's life. When Darlene threatens not to sign the permission slips for Outdoor School, Hope decides she can no longer keep silent about what is happening at home. By drawing strength from the example of Anne Frank, whom she is reading about in class, Hope gathers the courage to tell her mother how much the names hurt. The message of this story about the destructive power of verbal abuse is thinly veiled, but Hope is a winsome character whose bravery and determination will resonate with middle-grade readers.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2007, American Library Association.)
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