Children's Fiction Alternative Family
The Corps of the Bare-Boned Plane
- Publisher
- Groundwood Books Ltd
- Initial publish date
- Sep 2007
- Category
- Alternative Family, Humorous Stories, Death & Dying
- Recommended Grade
- p to 12
- Recommended Reading age
- 0
-
Paperback / softback
- ISBN
- 9780888998514
- Publish Date
- Sep 2007
- List Price
- $12.95
-
Hardback
- ISBN
- 9780374315535
- Publish Date
- Jul 2007
- List Price
- $19
Classroom Resources
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.
Description
Winner of the Sheila A. Egoff Children's Literature Prize
The Corps of the Bare-Boned Plane is filled with plot twists and extraordinarily strange characters. It is also a moving meditation on loss and finding family in the most unlikely places.
Teenage cousins Meline and Jocelyn are sent to live on a private island with their eccentric uncle following the death of their parents. The girls, who are barely on speaking terms, must find a way to deal with their grief, with only their distant, scholarly uncle, a crazy Holocaust-survivor housekeeper and a mysterious butler for company.
This moving novel, told in four characters' voices, is a layered account of a bad year from multiple points of view. Polly Horvath, one of Canada's greatest authors for children, once again brings humor and pain together in a cathartic, hopeful story that rises out of the wreckage of what might seem to be desperate lives.
About the author
Polly Horvath is one of the most highly acclaimed authors writing today. Her books include The Canning Season (winner of the National Book Award and the CLA Young Adult Book Award), Everything on a Waffle (a Newbery Honor Book, an ALA Notable Book and winner of the Mr. Christie's Book Award and the Sheila A. Egoff Children's Literature Prize), The Trolls (a National Book Award finalist), My One Hundred Adventures (a School Library Journal Best Book of the Year, a Booklist Editors' Choice, a Kirkus Reviews Best Children's Book of the Year and winner of a NAPPA Gold Award and the Sheila A. Egoff Children's Literature Prize), and Northward to the Moon (an Oprah's Book Club Kids' Reading List selection and winner of a Parents' Choice Gold Award). Her most recent book is Mr. and Mrs. Bunny — Detectives Extraordinaire!
Awards
- Commended, CCBC Best Books for Kids & Teens
- Winner, Sheila A. Egoff Children's Literature Prize
- Long-listed, Bolen Books Children's Book Prize
- Short-listed, CLA Young Adult Book of the Year Award
Editorial Reviews
Horvath has the uncanny ability to use ridiculous and sometimes anachronistic characters to soberly illuminate timeless truths - in this case, the lengths to which people will go to avoid facing their own feelings...Highly recommended.
CM Magazine
Horvath's prose has rarely been more incisive: she understands the workings of grief and conveys them with uncanny accuracy and sympathy...Unsparing, often grim, this book rejects false hopes in favor of fragile strivings for truth.
Publishers Weekly
Told from various points of view, with humour and empathy, we see how these very different people gradually form an odd kind of household and...begin to heal.
KLIATT
Horvath has a gift of looking at the dark side of life...while still promising love and consolation. Once again she explores loss, sorrow, and the crustiness that makes humans not entirely loveable in a novel that's wise, eccentric and honest.
Toronto Star
Horvath applies her familiar, gently comic touch to the story of Meline and Jocelyn...the real pleasure lies in listening in as Horvath's quirky characters search for a way to fly above unthinkable pain and ultimately find their won happy endings.
Quill & Quire
Horvath's writing is sophisticated and complex, filled with baffling characters, gothic situations, and darkly hilarious scenes.
Book Links
...an engaging story that would make a good read-aloud. Recommended.
Library Media Connection
Horvath is a gifted writer...passages invite immediate rereading and admiration.
School Library Journal
Librarian Reviews
The Corps of the Bare Boned Planes
In the blink of an eye, teenage cousins Meline and Jocelyn find themselves orphaned, and on their way to live with a mysterious and eccentric uncle on an isolated island in BC. As they drift through the weeks and months that seem to pass without notice on the island, a host of other equally mysterious and eccentric characters drift onto the island, which becomes a sort of refuge from their difficulties.Author Polly Horvath does an excellent job giving a unique voice to each of the four central characters, as they clean up their personal wreckage and the wreckage on the island. The dominant narrator is 15-year-old Meline, who is perhaps the most observant of the characters, but desperately tries to avoid thinking about the train wreck which killed her parents, and upset her existence. Jocelyn, the elder of the two by a few months, is more reserved and introspective, but is haunted by death and grief. Uncle Marten, a classic absent minded type, is deliberately oblivious and self-involved. The fourth voice belongs to the housekeeper Mrs. Mendelbaum, who avoids her own problems by meddling in those of the others. Interspersed with Yiddish expressions (defined by a glossary at the back), Mrs. Mendelbaum’s observations are blunt and insightful, but her own portrait is defined by the observations of others, and not her own. Added to the mix, is a mysterious butler named Humdinger, whose story is told through the narratives of others.
What the narratives all have in common is a sense of murkiness, allowing the reader small glimpses of what is beneath the surface, while requiring them to ask questions and draw their own inferences, filling in the puzzle pieces until the final picture is revealed. Overall, this is an engaging and thought provoking read, and fans of Horvath’s other work will not be disappointed.
Source: The Canadian Children's Bookcentre. Winter 2008. Vol.31 No.1.
The Corps of the Bare-Boned Plane
Following the death of their parents, cousins Jocelyn and Meline go to live with their eccentric uncle, with only a crazy Holocaust-survivor housekeeper and a mysterious butler for company. Told in four characters’ voices, this story is a moving meditation on loss and finding family in unlikely places.Source: The Canadian Children’s Book Centre. Best Books for Kids & Teens. 2008.