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Young Adult Fiction Self-esteem & Self-reliance

The Saver

by (author) Edeet Ravel

Publisher
Groundwood Books Ltd
Initial publish date
Sep 2008
Category
Self-Esteem & Self-Reliance, Girls & Women, Homelessness & Poverty
  • Hardback

    ISBN
    9780888998828
    Publish Date
    Sep 2008
    List Price
    $17.95
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9780888998835
    Publish Date
    Sep 2008
    List Price
    $12.95
  • eBook

    ISBN
    9781554980437
    Publish Date
    Sep 2008
    List Price
    $6.99

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Where to buy it

Out of print

This edition is not currently available in bookstores. Check your local library or search for used copies at Abebooks.

Recommended Age, Grade, and Reading Levels

  • Age: 0
  • Grade: p to 12
  • Reading age: 0

Description

Seventeen-year-old Fern has not had many breaks in life. She struggles at school and lives with her mother in a roach-infested apartment. Then, suddenly, her mother has a heart attack and dies, and Fern is devastated. But she's a survivor, and she's not afraid of hard work. Sidestepping social services, she quits school and sets out to look after herself.

With a little luck and ingenuity and a lot of determination, she manages to live rent-free by becoming a janitor in a crummy apartment building. When she runs out of toothpaste she gets freebies from dentists' offices. Then she tries to juggle two other shift jobs, including one in a restaurant kitchen, so she has access to leftover food. But despite her resourcefulness and resolve, the exhaustion and stress eventually take their toll, until Fern discovers that she is not really on her own after all.

About the author

Edeet was born on a kibbutz and lived in Israel until the age of seven. She has a PhD in Jewish studies from McGill and graduate degrees in literature and creative writing. She has taught at McGill, Concordia and John Abbott College. In addition to her award-winning novels for adults, Edeet has written Held, a YA thriller that was nominated for the CLA Young Adult Book of the Year, the Saskatchewan Willow Award, the Pennsylvania School Librarians Association Top Forty and the Arthur Ellis Best Juvenile Crime Award. Her YA novel The Saver has been adapted for film by Wiebke von Carolsfeld; the film has garnered prizes around the globe. Edeet lives in Guelph, Ontario, and gets her best ideas at the Y swimming pool. Her name is pronounced ee-DEET.

Edeet Ravel's profile page

Editorial Reviews

[The protaganist's] determination to find a better place is both understandable and laudable...a strong and clever teenager.

VOYA (Voice of Youth Advocates)

Written as a series of letters to an imaginary friend on another planet, [The Saver is] a compelling story of determination and the will to survive.

School Library Journal

Librarian Reviews

The Saver

Seventeen-year-old Fern returns home from school and discovers that her mother has been rushed to the hospital. She dies before Fern even has a chance to say goodbye. For a teen with a loving support network, this would be a devastating emotional experience. For Fern, who lives an existence of extreme isolation, this is a catastrophe of a different nature. She must find a way to survive; this means lying about her age and keeping her mother’s death a secret. Fern leaves school and finds jobs in an apartment building and a restaurant so that she won’t need to pay for rent or food. Her great desire is that all of her money will go towards savings, something she and her mother never had.

Fern’s story is told as a series of letters written to Xanoth, an alien character from a book she once read. These letters are written in a dispassionate style of storytelling that is often effective for difficult subjects like death but it is never an easy one to accomplish well. Yet Ravel succeeds in creating a wonderfully threedimensional character even while Fern’s thoughts and insights are understated and reserved. Sometimes Fern does share her loneliness and these instances are especially powerful because they occur rarely.

Fern is utterly believable and even though she is more marginalized than most young adult heroines, she is smart and easy to sympathize with. Ravel slowly introduces some stability and emotional support into Fern’s life and shows that she is too strong and adaptable to give in to despair.

Source: The Canadian Children's Bookcentre. Winter 2009. Volume 32 Number 1.

The Saver

After her mother dies, Fern manages to live rent-free by working as a janitor in a crummy apartment building and survives by other ingenious tactics. But despite her resourcefulness and resolve, exhaustion and stress take their toll, until Fern learns that she’s not on her own after all.

Source: The Canadian Children’s Book Centre. Best Books for Kids & Teens. 2009.

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