Raymie
Nightingale by Kate Di Camillo (Walker Books)
HC RRP $ 19.99
ISBN 9781406363135
Reviewed by Anastasia Gonis
Ten year-old Raymie’s father has left without saying
goodbye. He has run off with another woman and she is broken at being
fatherless. Her mother just sits and gazes into space. Raymie has a plan to
bring her father home. If she wins the baton-twirling competition, she will be
in the papers, and her dad will see her and possibly return.
There are two other girls in Ida Nee’s
baton-twirling class -- Louisiana
Elefante, daughter of two trapeze artists drowned at sea who lives with her
eccentric grandmother. The other girl, Beverly Tapinski, is the daughter of a
cop who lives in another city. All three girls have only one thing in common -
their fatherlessness.
Louisiana is prone to fainting spells as she has
swampy lungs. She is determined to win the competition to get the prize money
to avoid being sent to the county home when her grandmother is no longer there.
Beverly doesn’t care very much about anything, but she can twirl a baton.
These three girls become bound together by their
mutual loss and loneliness, and all their questions that remain unanswered.
Deeply moving, philosophical and thought-provoking,
Kate Di Camillo, two time recipient of the Newbery Medal, always produces
spectacular work. She captures the purity of child characters’ voices and
thoughts, and leaves the reader enraptured by the strength of insight and emotion
that pours through her work without it being sentimental.
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