A Drowned Maiden’s Hair

I’ve heard nothing but good about this one, by Laura Amy Schlitz. I liked the Newbery winner she wrote, and so I figured with those two recommendations, I couldn’t go wrong with this one.

Thankfully, I was right. I loved this little story. Schlitz deftly weaves a bit of mystery, some beautiful scenery and a lot of longing into a not-so-traditional orphan story. Wonderful.

Maud, an 11-years-old orphan, is singing in the outhouse of Barbary Asylum on the best day of her life: the day that Hyacinth Hawthorne decides that it’s Maud she wants to adopt. She has always longed for a home, or at least ever since she was 5 and someone adopted her older brother and younger sister and not her. She goes home with Hyacinth, meets her two sisters Judith and Victoria, and then discovers that she’s to play a part in the “family business”. She makes the best of it, vying for Hyacinth’s attention and affection, and eventually finds happiness in the bargain.

That’s a terrible plot summary, but I don’t know how to do the book justice while not giving too much away. I loved Maud as a character: feisty and spunky yet with so much longing to be loved it made my heart break. I thought it was an interesting look at family and death and separation and surviving… and so much. I liked the relationship that Maud had with Muffet (the deaf house maid in the Hawthorne home); how Maud came to understand Muffet and how their relationship developed. I really liked the ending, even though I saw it coming. I thought it was just perfect, and very satisfying.

M’s only quibble with the book was the subtitle: A Melodrama. She finished the book and said that it didn’t really read like a melodrama (or at least how Hubby defined a melodrama to her). (My only quibble is that Schlitz seems to like colons in her titles. They all have one.) According to trusty old Webster, a melodrama can mean both “a work characterized by extravagant theatricallity and by the predominance of plot and physical action over characterization” (doesn’t quite fit) or something “appealing to the emotions” (fits better). Maybe M’s right: it’s not quite a melodrama (though I think it was melodramatic at some parts). But it is a really wonderful book.

April Fools Fun: What’s in a Name

Found via Blonde Momentos:

1. Your rock star name (first pet, current car): Tootie Honda

2. Your gangsta name (fave ice cream flavour, favourite type of shoe): Dulce de Leche Slide

3. Your Native American name (favourite colour, favourite animal): Green Elephant

4. Your soap opera name (middle name, city where you were born): Nicole Castro Valley

5. Your Star Wars name (the first 3 letters of your last name, first 2 of your first name): Foxme

6. Superhero name (2nd favourite colour, favourite drink): Blue Lemonade

7. NASCAR name (the first names of your grandfathers): James Max

8. Stripper name (the name of your favourite perfume/cologne/scent, favourite candy): Citrus Dove

10. TV weather anchor name (your 5th grade teacher’s last name, a major city that starts with the same letter): Westenskow Washington

11. Spy name (your favourite season/holiday, flower): Fall Hyacinth

12. Cartoon name: (favourite fruit, article of clothing you’re wearing right now): Strawberry Jeans

13. Hippie name (What you ate for breakfast, your favourite tree): Cereal Maple

The only one I cheated on was #4 — I don’t have a middle name, so I used the one I gave myself sometime when I was a teenager. Still, it was kind of fun. Happy April Fools Day!