When “The One and Only Ivan” won the Newbery Award there
was a good deal of chatter that this book, “Wonder,” should have won. Ironically, “Wonder,” which is a very good
book with a plethora of starred reviews and raves, came up empty at award
season … not even winning a Schneider Award, which it is aptly suited for. My take is this: “Wonder” is terrific. “The One and Only Ivan” is terrific. Both pull at your heart-strings a-plenty. Both humanize protagonists who are ostracized
and stared at. “The One and Only Ivan,”
however, is a more literary book, and the Newbery has always been an award
about literary quality – and notably not about popularity or even stories that
are particularly engaging (I refer to “Criss-Cross” here…among others). Nonetheless, I agree that this book should
have been given some award somehow.
“Wonder” is the story of August, a boy born with tremendous facial
deformities. After a childhood
spent in multiple surgeries and lengthy recovery periods, he enters a public school
for the first time in the 5th grade.
As imagined, Auggie’s road is a little rough, given his looks and middle
school mentalities. The book is not a
“downer” however, and is very much about perseverance – Auggie’s spirit is indefatigable,
and his determination to live his life clearly makes him a “Wonder.” This could almost be a regular old “school
story.” Auggie’s reflections, and the
interactions around him, are not substantially different from the many tales of
pre-teens trying to fit in. Told in
short chapters (our reading teacher used it as a read-aloud), the point of view
is mostly that of August, but from time to time the POV switches to others
around him. I use the term “around him”
very literally. Like all children with
significant health issues, the siblings tend to be ignored. Auggie’s sister notes that he is the sun,
while she and the rest of the family orbit around him. Each “part” that signals a change in narrator
recreates the cover image of a face with one eye – changing the hairstyle or
other details to indicate different people.
It visually highlights the fact that each person talking is
reflection of Auggie’s world. The only flaw in the book, IMHO is that there are some minor inconsistencies in these break-out sections and some
questions left unanswered. If judges were picky (they would have to be) this small issue may have kept the book out of medal contention last
winter. Who knows? Set in New
York city, this 11 year-old boy seems more mature than
average, but that fits given the setting and the trials he has had to
endure. With tremendously supportive
parents, the story is very warm and
fuzzy. On the whole, it is a feel-good
tale. There is even an amusing appendix,
complete with a “precepts” assignment given by one teacher. The only lasting mystery is R.J. Palacio, who
is the author but the name is a pseudonym.
Is it possible that this is the real sister of the fictional
“August”? Possibly. In any case, the novel is told with love, and
that shines through every page. Enjoy.
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