Children's Fiction Adolescence
How to Make a Wave
- Publisher
- Red Deer Press
- Initial publish date
- May 2008
- Category
- Adolescence, Coming of Age
-
Paperback / softback
- ISBN
- 9780889953956
- Publish Date
- May 2008
- List Price
- $6.95
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Where to buy it
Recommended Age, Grade, and Reading Levels
- Age: 12 to 18
- Grade: 7 to 12
Description
2009 Calgary Library Foundation Literary Awards: Best Child or Teen Book finalist
Delia keeps people away - she thinks she's ugly, she thinks her family is weird; her mom took off and went to India when Delia was a little girl. Delia keeps her distance from others though she has a good friend in Aunt Shirley who helps her to realize that all people have hurts and problems. Through her conversations with Shirley and her explorations in art class, Delia uncovers memories of a car accident, which lead her to discover a hurtful secret at the centre of her family.
Shirley is compassionate and honest, though she doesn't allow Delia to wallow in self-pity and anger. She shares with Delia her own hurts and disappointments and so does the art teacher, Ms. Murti. Delia discovers that she's been self-absorbed and has built walls to separate herself from others.
Gradually, she is able to accept truth, and to be honest about her pain. She is able to consider that life is full of terrible beautiful aching mystery and that sometimes a coincidence is more than coincidence, it may have to do with something greater, with the alignment of universal forces - with the making of a wave.
About the author
Lisa Hurst-Archer was born in Windsor, Ontario. Her mother's family came to Prince Edward Island from the British Isles and the island of Guernsey. Her father's people came to Waterloo County via Pennsylvania as part of a migration of Mennonites. Lisa loves to travel and share stories along the way but always likes to come home to the wide open skies of Alberta. She regards the Rocky Mountains and the rolling prairie as her good medicine.
Editorial Reviews
"How to Make a Wave is the first book I've read for young adults that engages the reader in a quest for spiritual understanding. Hurst-Archer successfully shows the paradigm shift in Delia's beliefs about herself, the world, and the greater questions about the universe."
— CM Magazine
"Readers who enjoy drama and mystery will appreciate this selection."
— VOYA
"This novel does a fine job of using the changing nature of water to illustrate the changes in the girl. . . (Readers) will find a few quiet, elegant moments in the story."
— School Library Journal