





by SB Sarah • Friday, October 05, 2007 at 06:00 PM
Our Grade:
Title: Bridge to Terabithia
Author: Katherine Peterson
Publication Info: HarperTrophy May 24, 2005, ISBN: 006073941X
Genre: Top 100 Banned Books
Submitted by CC

I am doing this review from memory, since my signed copy is still in a moving box and I haven’t read it for a few years. I love this book and have given copies to a variety of people over the years, all of whom agree with me, it’s a magical read.
--Sixth grade, a new school, I’m changing and so is the world around me. My teacher, Mrs. Harris, reads a book out loud every day after lunch. She read “Rifles for Waite” by Harold Keith, the book that led me to my profession as an historian, she also read “Bridge to Terabithia.” She simply sat down, opened the book, and started reading. We were transformed. No other book had been as compelling to us before. No other book had us talking about it at lunch and wondering what would happen next. No other book earned such an emotional reaction with boxes of tissue being passed around the classroom while we listened as one of our new best friends died.
The story of two kids and the imaginary world they inhabit isn’t groundbreaking. What makes this story so different is the depth the characters have, and not just hero and heroine. Family, teachers, and other supporting characters are well drawn. They are there for a specific reason, to move the story along. So often in young adult (I hate that phrase) books the supporting cast is nominal and rather flat. Their only purpose is set dressing for the h/h. Here they are truly part of the story and part of the lives of the h/h.
When tragedy and death strike it is love, friendship, and compassion that allow the survivor to truly get on with the business of living.
I’m confused as to why this book would be banned. It is a story of friendship, love, loss and living. It teaches us that we’re not quite the odd-ball we thought we were, but that we each are truly special. It allows kids to explore reality from the safety of fantasy. To learn to make their own world, so they can better make their way in the REAL world. It is strong, stirring, and encouraging. There is a reason why it has won so many awards including the coveted Newberry Medal Award and has been in print for so many years, because at it’s core it is a well told, engaging story.

10.05.07 at 06:42 PM |