I enjoy reading, and among the things I like reading most is fiction for tweens and
teens. E.L. Konigsburg is one of our finest writers in this genre. In 1968 she won
the Newbery Medal for From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler. Almost
30 years later she won the award again, for The View from Saturday. I recently
read another of Ms. Konigsburg’s novels, Silent to the Bone. I recommend it
wholeheartedly for readers ages 12 and older.
As in her Newbery winners, Konigsburg’s main characters are bright
young teens who set out to solve a mystery. But there’s a catch:
one of the boys, who was integrally involved in the mystery, is unable
to speak about it. Since his baby sister was injured, Branwell has
been completely uncommunicative. It is up to his best friend, Connor, to try to help
Branwell find his voice – and find a way to avoid serious legal charges.
Relationships are at the center of this story. There is Branwell’s love for his
father, which is unquestioned until Branwell comes home from a summer visit to
his grandparents to find that his father has fallen in love (Branwell’s mother died
when he was an infant). Connor’s relationship with his much older half-sister is
sometimes complicated by the fact that she seems intent on not cutting their father
any slack. Branwell finds himself having confusing, lustful feelings for Vivian, the
20-year-old British au pair; these feelings threaten to change everything – including
the lifelong bond between Branwell and Connor.
Konigsburg addresses some difficult issues here, including blended family
relationships, the burgeoning sexual urges of teenage boys, and the persistence
of hurt feelings over years or decades. She deals with these topics
sensitively, without become pedantic or overly analytical. Like the characters
in the story, the reader is allowed to work through his or her own feelings
while trying to put together the pieces of this puzzle.
Many of the children and adolescents I see struggle with the impact of
parental separation, divorce, and adjusting to new family members. These kids
often have trouble talking about these matters: they hit too close to home. I
am in favor of any book that shows how young characters – and their parents -
can work through such problems and grow from the experience. Silent to the Bone
does that marvelously.
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