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Summary
Summary
HARPER'S DAD IS getting a divorce from her beloved stepmother, Jane. Even worse, Harper has lost her stepsister, Tess; the divorce divides them. Harper decides to escape by joining a volunteer program to build a house for a family in Tennessee who lost their home in a tornado. Not that she knows a thing about construction. Soon she's living in a funky motel and working long days in blazing heat with a group of kids from all over the country. At the site, she works alongside Teddy, the son of the family for whom they are building the house. Their partnership turns into a summer romance, complete with power tools. Learning to trust and love Teddy isn't easy for Harper, but it's the first step toward finding her way back home.
Reviews (5)
Publisher's Weekly Review
Reinhardt artfully parallels the construction of a house with the reconstruction of a broken family in a work as intimate and intelligently wrought as her previous YA novels, A Brief Chapter in My Impossible Life and Harmless. Shaken by the recent divorce of her father and stepmother and her separation from stepsister and best friend, Tess, Harper Evans jumps at the chance to participate in a summer program in a small Tennessee town, where she and other high school students will build a new house for a family whose home was destroyed by a tornado. Harper aims to bury herself in physical labor to forget about problems back in L.A., but gets sidetracked when she falls in love with Teddy, one of the house's intended residents. Weaving flashbacks of Harper's home life before and after the divorce into the romance between Harper and Teddy, Reinhardt builds a story within a story: one exploring reasons the heroine feels betrayed, the other focusing on how she learns to trust again. This meticulously crafted book illustrates how both homes and relationships can be resurrected through hard work, hope and teamwork. Ages 12-up. (May) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Horn Book Review
(High School) Knowing nothing about house-building but loads about how a home can fall to pieces, seventeen-year-old Harper volunteers to help build a house for a family that lost theirs in a tornado. The distance from L.A. to Bailey, Tennessee, isn't enough to escape her grief for her broken-up family and her frustration with her friend Gabriel. Soon, however, she finds friendship and more with Teddy, son of the family whose house they're building, who is working alongside the other teens signed up for the twelve-week project. Teddy's home and belongings are gone, but his family survived the tornado intact; Harper's house is still standing, but she has lost to divorce her beloved stepmother, who has moved out with Harper's little half-brother and two stepsisters, one of whom is Harper's best friend. As Harper helps rebuild Teddy's home, Teddy helps Harper salvage her family relationships. Sections alternate between "Here" and "Home" as likable narrator Harper catches readers up on her past; the many parallels between the house-building and the home-wrecking (then rebuilding) are clearly drawn but subtle and believable. Readers will find this story full of difficulty and pain -- but ultimately deeply satisfying. From HORN BOOK, (c) Copyright 2010. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Booklist Review
When you live in California and have relatives in New York, everything in between feels like a big inconvenience, says 17-year-old Harper. But even the middle of the country sounds better to Harper than her own home, which feels empty since her stepmother and stepsiblings moved out. Harper is also eager to leave Gabriel, her sort-of boyfriend behind, so she signs up as a summer volunteer to build houses for tornado victims in Bailey, Tennessee. In chapters that alternate between recollections of her past year and her Tennessee summer, Harper slowly reveals the events in L.A. that led to heartbreak and then the healing work, friendships, and romance she finds in Bailey. Reinhardt adds great depth to the familiar story of a teen changed by a summer escape with strong characters and perceptive, subtle explorations of love, family, sex, and friendship all narrated in Harper's believable voice. Teens, especially young women on the verge of independence, will see themselves in Harper, her questions, and her resilient heart.--Engberg, Gillian Copyright 2008 Booklist
School Library Journal Review
Gr 9 Up-Dana Reinhardt's novel (Wendy Lamb Books, 2008) is well suited to the audio format--it's character driven, thoughtful, and rife with both interior monologue and witty repartee among characters. Seventeen-year-old Harper makes a proactive decision when things go wrong in her personal life--her parents' divorce and two important friendships go awry--and joins a summer volunteer program to help rebuild a house destroyed in a Tennessee tornado. As a secular Jewish girl from Los Angeles, Harper has a lot to learn in semi-rural Tennessee even before getting involved with a biracial boyfriend. Reinhardt treats cultural diversity, divorce, and bleded families with grace. Caitlin Greer voices a credible Harper, but some of her Southern accents for other characters are flat or, worse, caricatures. Pacing of both story and reading are good. Harper's issues, including her journey to build a house and rebuild her own life, are accessible to teens and the solutions are realistic.-Francisca Goldsmith, Halifax Public Libraries, Nova Scotia, Canada (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Kirkus Review
Sixteen-year-old Harper lost her mother when she was two years old. Her father subsequently married Jane, a lawyer with two daughters, Rose and Tess, who became Harper's best friends. But because of her father's infidelity, Jane has left, and Harper's ideal home has been torn apart. The novel begins with Harper aboard a flight from her home in California to Bailey, Tenn., where she has joined a volunteer project to rebuild a house destroyed by a tornado. Scenes from the past alternate with Harper's present-tense account of her summer to provide background for her emotional travails. There: stepsister Tess seethes at her stepfather's betrayal; here: construction partner Teddy becomes increasingly attractive as more than a building buddy. The author juxtaposes the metaphorical (Harper learns to rebuild her own "house") with the concrete in a well-paced first-person narrative spiced with summer flings and teen romance. Readers will find Harper absolutely charming, even at her most sardonic moments. (Fiction. 13 & up) Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Excerpts
Excerpts
The world is drowning. Sinking. It's being swallowed up. Glaciers are melting. Oceans are rising. It's an indisputable fact: We're ruining the planet. I'm finding it hard to keep this in mind gazing out my window. From where I'm sitting things look, well, dry. The earth looks thirsty. All I can see is dusty brown. Miles and miles of it stretching on forever. Here comes a flight attendant now with her big block of a metal cart to ask me if I'd like something to drink. If I'm thirsty. I order a diet root beer. She smiles. Diet root beer is not a beverage she keeps in the recesses of her metal cart. Okay. Make it a Diet Sprite. Out of luck again. I take water. No ice. I swore off regular soda about a month ago and took up the diet variety. This has nothing to do with my body image, which I'll confess, like most of us, isn't exactly stellar. But this is about something bigger than just my thighs. It's about the national obesity epidemic. It's about taking a stand against the sugar water that's turning our children into Oompa-Loompas. So I stopped. I know diet soda isn't great for you either, but you have to start somewhere. And anyway, right now I'm drinking water. No ice. We're about an hour away. I've flown over this part of the country before. Many times. When you live in California and you have relatives in New York, everything in between feels like a big inconve-nience. It's what keeps you from them, or here from there, and you want it out of your way as quickly as possible because your headphones aren't working, and anyway you've already seen the movie three times. But today I'm watching that big inconvenience and how it's changed from a flat, endless grid of look-alike houses to snowcapped mountains to red valleys to dusty brown, thirsty earth. Today I'm waiting to be dropped down in the middle of it. Tennessee. To be more precise, I'm going to Bailey, Tennessee, which almost nobody has ever heard of. If you watch TV or read the newspaper or if you have a pulse, then you know about what happened in New Orleans. You know about the hurricane with the name of a princess that left the city underwater. But that wasn't the world's last catastrophe. Catastrophes come, and they come. They come in all shapes and sizes, one after the other, lined up like planes in the sky, waiting for their turn to land. The tornado in Bailey came this past April, and nobody paid attention except for one small organization with a teen volunteer program where I am spending my summer vacation. Sure, the tornado in Bailey wreaked havoc on the lives of an insignificant number of people when you compare it to Hurricane Katrina, but when it's your life . . . I doubt it feels insignificant to you. Tornadoes. They're just another indication that the planet is going to hell in a handbasket. A handbasket that's been meticulously crafted and woven by us, the backward-looking members of the human race. If it weren't for how we're ruining things with our trash and our gas emissions and the way we're turning the planet into an Easy-Bake Oven, there might not have even been a category F4 tornado in Bailey, Tennessee. Then again, maybe it would have come anyway. Tornadoes can happen out of nowhere. Without warning. * * * HOME It's one of those sad stories. I hesitate to even talk about it, because when I do, people start to feel sorry for me, and that isn't necessary. My mother died when I was two. Okay. Now I've said it. Now I can get that out of the way. The important thing is that my dad didn't die. He lived. He still lives. In fact, right now he's probably back at his office, after fighting through traffic from the airport, listening to one of his patients drone on and on, staring out the window. And then he'll see a plane flying overhead with a white, gauzy streak trailing behind it, and he'll wonder why it seemed like a good idea to let me go all the way to Tennessee for the summer. This isn't the first time I've run away. Once, when we were about eight, Tess and I stuffed a backpack with a towel, some socks and a box of Lucky Charms. We figured what's the point in running away unless someone knows about it? So we told Dad. He said fine. Just remember, you aren't allowed to cross the street. We stopped at the corner and ate a few handfuls of stale Lucky Charms before turning. We turned the next corner, and the next, until we arrived back where we'd started: at our own front door. It isn't like that now. I'm running away, and I'm not only crossing the street, I'm crossing this dried-out country and I won't be back for twelve weeks and Dad is going to miss me because he'll be all alone. Tess is gone. So is Rose. So, of course, is Jane. He has Cole, sure, but Cole is only six, and what kind of company is a six-year-old who talks to insects? Especially when Dad sees him only some weekends and every other Wednesday night? I guess I should start at the beginning. There are so many beginnings to choose from. There's me and my birth almost eighteen years ago with my umbilical cord wrapped around my neck, a detail Dad likes to remind me about when I do something particularly boneheaded. There's Mom's death, which although it's an ending, the Big Ending, is also the beginning of my life without a mom. Then there's when Dad met Jane and the beginning of the only family I've ever known. Yes. I'll start there. From the Hardcover edition. Excerpted from How to Build a House by Dana Reinhardt All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.