FICTION

Dr. Bird's Advice for Sad Poets

320p. Houghton Harcourt. 2013. Tr $16.99. ISBN 978-0-547-92853-1; ebook $16.99. ISBN 978-0-544-03565-2
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Gr 9 Up—James Whitman tries to adopt the spirit of Walt Whitman, loving nature and sounding a loud YAWP to show proof of his existence, but he is having a rough time keeping his poetic chin up lately. His older sister, Jorie, has been expelled from their high school and his abusive parents throw her out of their house. James is feeling guilty about not standing up for her and is depressed about his own life. He is the kind of teen who will run into traffic to try and save an injured bird, but he's also an introspective poet who has frequent suicidal thoughts. His own internal therapist is a pigeon he calls Dr. Bird, and since James is a smart guy, she offers good advice. But since James is also, as he puts it, "wired funny," he does not always listen to Dr. Bird. Since he lives in his head so much, the novel's pace can be a bit slow. Roskos perfectly captures the voice of a teen, but this boy is unbelievably self-aware. Readers only see tiny bits of his parents through his eyes. This is problematic, as James is not the most reliable of narrators, but that certainly adds to readers' empathy. Although Jorie cuts herself and James has suicidal thoughts, the narrative points in a slightly more positive direction for them both by the end as James is able to confront his parents and demand their assistance in getting him help.—Geri Diorio, Ridgefield Library, CT
"I'm a depressed, anxious kid." Maneuvering the hazards of high school, abusive parents, a banished sister, and diminishing mental health proves exhausting for sixteen-year-old James Whitman. He's tried everything to feel better -- from reciting Walt Whitman to yawping in the face of adversity, hugging trees, rescuing a Tastykake wrapper (he thinks it's a bird) from being hit by a bus, and even talking to an imaginary pigeon therapist about his problems -- but none of it seems to help. When his parents refuse to pay for real therapy, James decides to get a part-time job in order to afford it himself, while simultaneously undertaking a crusade to get his sister reinstated in school and ultimately welcomed back into his home. However, digging into his sister's past unearths secrets he isn't entirely ready to face and solidifies his belief that his family may be irreparably broken. Though his circumstances are nothing to laugh at, James's wry sense of humor, one of his most charming coping mechanisms, effortlessly fuses with the starkness of his reality. Author Roskos's strength lies in his refusal to tidy up the mess in James's life and in his relentless honesty about surviving with depression and anxiety. shara l. hardeson

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