Far from fair

Elana K Arnold

Book - 2016

As far as twelve-year-old Odette Zyskowski is concerned, her parents have ruined her life by selling the house she and her younger brother have grown up in, getting an RV, and giving her some little mutt instead of the Labrador Retriever she wanted--but as they travel north to see her grandmother, Odette becomes aware of an even more frightening problem: her parents may be on the verge of a divorce.

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Subjects
Published
Boston ; New York : Houghton Mifflin Harcourt [2016]
Language
English
Main Author
Elana K Arnold (author)
Physical Description
229 pages ; 21 cm
ISBN
9780544602274
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

No one asked 12-year-old Odette if she wanted to sell her stuff and move into an old RV. Yet here she is, along with her parents, little brother, a ferret, and her new dog a tiny wiry-haired thing, not the Lab she wanted traveling to Grandma Sissy's on Washington's Orca Islands. Nothing about this is fair. In such tight quarters, tensions run high, and Odette fumes over the injustice of having her life turned upside down. This falls away, however, when they arrive at Sissy's and Odette can barely recognize the frail, sickly woman before her as her grandmother. Arnold explores the Death with Dignity Act as well as the strain of having an autistic sibling and parents whose marriage is on the rocks. These complex issues surround Odette as she struggles with personal losses friends, home, cell phone that feel trivial in comparison but are vital to middle-schoolers. Arnold (The Question of Miracles, 2015) deals with the many bumps in the road honestly, yet maintains an onward-and-upward outlook on life.--Smith, Julia Copyright 2015 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Living in an RV is the last thing 12-year-old Odette Zyskowski wants-in fact, it tops her list of "things that aren't fair." But her father took a "voluntary layoff" from work, and the family is selling its California house to care for Odette's ailing grandmother in Washington State. The family (along with Odette's new dog and her younger brother's ferret) sets off on an eventful road trip. Between cramped quarters, car trouble, her parents' rocky marriage, and endless hours of driving, Odette is miserable (not even running helps), and everyone knows it. Arnold's The Question of Miracles dealt equally well with topics of leaving home and losing a loved one, and she has a knack for sympathetically expressing Odette's confusing emotions about those events, as well as feeling disconnected from her best friend and liking a boy she meets. Arnold's descriptive prose and short, episodic chapters warmly relay the family's struggles. It's an engaging, emotional ride as Odette learns the truth of one of her grandmother's sayings: "Even in the bad... there is opportunity for good." Ages 10-12. Agent: Rubin Pfeffer, Rubin Pfeffer Content. (Mar.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Odette Zyskoski's life is being ruined by her parents' decision to sell their house and head north in an RV they've dubbed the Coach. After most of their possessions are disposed of in a garage sale, the prospect of living in tight quarters with her parents and little brother and just one cellphone among them leaves Odette feeling hurt and angry. She resents not having any say in the decision that means leaving her best friend, Mieko, and spending seventh grade being "roadschooled." The family meanders from Southern California to the Northwest coast to spend time with Grandma Sissy, whose health is declining faster than any of them realizes. On the ferry to Orcas Island, Odette meets a cute, dark-skinned boy named Harris, and they exchange phone numbers. Missed connections nearly spoil their brief friendship, bringing Odette's frustration with her parents' lack of understanding to a head. By using a third-person narration that keeps Odette at a slight remove from her family, Arnold captures the loneliness of a young teenager's inability to express the emotions that accompany life's upheavals. It's only Grandma Sissy's insight into Odette's complicated feelingsand her aphorism that "the best way out is always through"that allows Odette to get past her difficulty coping with the unfairness of it all. An affecting, delicately handled story of growing up. (Fiction. 9-12) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

The Ugliest Thing IT WAS THE ugliest thing she had ever seen. Obnoxiously ugly. Embarrassingly ugly. Epically ugly. And it was sitting in her family's driveway.      Actually, no. It was sitting in the Waldmans' driveway--or, at least, what would shortly become the Waldmans' driveway when escrow closed in a few days and the house Odette Zyskowski grew up in wouldn't be her home anymore. That thing would be her home. That run-down, beat-up brown-and-brown RV that Mom and Dad had just pulled up in, honking what was intended to be a cheerful beep, but instead sounded like the mournful death cry of a desperate whale.      Odette looked behind herself at the house, trying to ignore the SOLD banner splashed across the FOR SALE sign stuck in the front lawn. She had never given the house much thought. It was just a house. But now she saw the brick path winding through the grass from the sidewalk, uneven and tipsy, and it occurred to Odette that she knew every brick on that path--which ones were chipped, which listed slightly to the side, which were stamped with the bricklayer's name, Steinberg & Sons.      She saw the bright red front door, the door she slammed through every afternoon at 3:14 P.M. Behind that door, Odette knew, was the mud bench where she ditched her backpack and shoes. She saw the wide, bright windows, the shutters that framed them. She took in the dark shingle roof that her parents had been talking about replacing for years but would soon become the Waldmans' problem.      It was a beautiful home.      Mom cut the engine of the RV, and Dad threw open the metal door on the side and a set of two steps popped out.      Rex stood next to Odette, rocking up onto the balls of his feet, the way he did when he got excited. "Awesome, awesome, awesome," he chanted to himself, and when Dad called, "So, what do you guys think?" Rex shouted "Awesome!" and ran full speed into Dad, butting his head into Dad's stomach and grinding it against him.      Dad said "Oof!" and laughed, and Mom, coming out of the RV, said, "Careful, buddy," and then she asked Odette, "So, honey, what do you think?" but Odette was already heading back into the Waldmans' house, slamming the red door shut behind her. Hands ODETTE'S ROOM WAS at the end of the hall, just before the turn to her parents' bedroom. The hall was stacked with boxes, piled three high and labeled in thick black Sharpie ink: REX'S ROOM (STORAGE); LINENS AND BEDDING (STORAGE); BATHROOM MISC. (YARD SALE); BOOKS (LIBRARY GIVEAWAY); BATHROOM ESSENTIALS (COACH).      That was what Mom was calling the RV: the "Coach." The word brought a few things to Odette's mind--baseball, for one, a sport she found endlessly boring but still somehow comforting; Mr. Santiago, the track-and-field coach at Odette's middle school, who after he'd seen her run the mile in PE had spent most of Odette's sixth grade year trying to recruit her to the team; and Cinderella's pumpkin-turned-coach that she took to the ball.      None of these images had anything to do with Mom's use of the word in sentences like "When we pick up the Coach, the first thing we'll do is fix up your private space, Detters" (which was what she liked to call Odette), and "It might not look like much in the pictures, kids, but the Coach has under twenty thousand miles on it and is as snug as a bug inside."      The Coach. Sitting in the driveway. Odette couldn't get far enough away, no matter how good a runner she was. So she had to content herself with slamming her bedroom door--hard enough to make the windows rattle--and throwing herself face-down onto the bed.      Her sheets smelled like home. The same detergent her mom had been using as long as Odette had been aware of detergent smell. Probably before that. And even with her eyes closed and her face pressed into her bedspread, Odette could perfectly picture her room. The pale blue walls. The light pink ceiling, a gently whirling fan just above her bed. The windows, looking out over the backyard, with their gossamer-thin ballooning white curtains.      And more: the seven pillows she arranged each morning after making her bed, and then restacked each night on the carpet before climbing between her sheets. Two yellow, one pink, one green, two blue, one red.      There wouldn't be room for her seven throw pillows in the Coach. "You can bring one," Mom had told her.       One. Absolutely ridiculous.      When the knock came at her door, Odette ignored it. She knew it was Dad from the way he knocked--always a little pattern, a little song, not just straight across with all his knuckles.      She heard him open the door anyway, even though she hadn't said "Come in," and that bothered her too, that lack of respect, that lack of privacy, and the mean little voice in her head taunted, You'd better get used to it, Odette. There won't be much privacy in the Coach.      Her dad cleared his throat. Odette could tell that he was still lurking just inside the doorway. That was her dad--a lurker. He was always ho-ing and hum-ing about decisions, weighing the costs and benefits. Mom sometimes said, "You're going to drive me crazy, Simon! Just do something!"      But he didn't usually do anything --at least, not anything important. He'd ho and hum until Odette's mom got tired of waiting and just did it herself--whatever it was that needed doing. Choosing which car to buy. Picking the toppings for the pizza.      And then, three months ago, Odette's dad had done something. Something big. Something crazy.      "They were going to lay off three guys," she heard Dad telling Mom. "Three guys who actually like their jobs. And with Sissy being so sick, not to mention the trouble we've been having with us . . . with each other . . . I thought, well, I guess I thought it couldn't make things any worse."      It was late at night, and Dad hadn't gotten home from the office in time for dinner, which wasn't that unusual. Odette was supposed to be asleep, like Rex was in his room (dark blue with deep-sea ocean fish painted on the walls and a jellyfish diorama on his bookcase), but she wasn't. She was sneaking out to the kitchen for a cookie. And there were her parents, sitting at the table, with only the small sink light turned on. They were holding hands.      It looked so strange, their hands. Fingers interwoven, like the kids at school, like they were announcing to the world that they were a couple. It wasn't something Odette was used to seeing between her parents. Usually, if anyone was holding anyone's hand, it was Mom and Rex. Sometimes Dad and Rex. But never Mom and Dad.      Odette had backed slowly down the hall toward her room. What did that mean, to lay someone off? And what did Dad mean, that whatever he had done couldn't make things any worse?      Odette knew Grandma Sissy wasn't healthy. Not that Mom and Dad had told her all the details, but Odette knew. She'd heard Mom on the phone with Grandma Sissy, asking about doctor appointments and pain medication and nausea. But that other thing that Dad had said, about trouble between him and Mom . . . Odette didn't know what to think about that.      When she woke up the next morning, she had forgotten all about the night before, the table, the handholding. And she walked into the kitchen ready to find what she always found: Rex expounding about something that fascinated him--queer ocean life, or rare types of pygmy animals that were legal to own as pets, or the best way to make applesauce--and her mother nodding and pretending to listen while making their breakfast and packing their lunches.      Instead she found them--her parents--sitting again at the table, holding hands. Holding hands, again. For a minute she thought they hadn't moved, but then she saw that Mom was dressed, not in her robe, and that Dad was wearing his weekend clothes instead of the rumpled suit he'd been in last night, even though this was a Thursday. And Rex was with them, eating oatmeal and whacking his feet against the bottom of the table in a rhythmic thumping beat that sounded to Odette the way a zombie might sound dragging a non-working leg behind himself.      And then Dad had smiled--something else she hadn't seen much of lately, come to think of it, and Mom said, "Good morning, Detters," and then they proceeded to ruin her life. Excerpted from Far from Fair by Elana K. Arnold 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.