Review in progress: As I read it. JoDean recommended this one and I like it already and I am only on page 5. So I am going to write what I find.
The book is about a 6' 3 1/2" 12 year old nick-named Tree (real name Sam). (My review is at the bottom.)
pg. 5 - ...being a tree is the best thing going in the plant world. People expect trees to be strong and steady and give good shade. Tallness is packed with great expectations.
pg. 7 - It was winter in his life, and not just because it was December.
pg. 10 - He looked at the empty wall where the big hutch used to be. His mother had taken it when she moved out. The shadow of where it had been remained. His dad said they were going to get a new hutch, but they hadn't yet. His dad said they were going to repaint the downstairs so the darkened places on the walls where the pictures had hung--the ones his mother took when she moved out--would be gone. They hadn't done that, either. Divorce casts so many shadows.
pg. 16 - "Lean on me, Grandpa." He did. Tree took the weight. If there was ever a reason to be a too-tall seventh-grader, it was so you could help your grandpa get walking again.
pg. 33 - (Grandpa on the Vietnam War) "The people who went to fight that war, for the most part did their best to fight an enemy that was harder to figure out and more dangerous than any of us knew. Most of us were kids--nineteen, twenty--I was twenty-five. We thought we'd kick butt and everything would be over fast. We'd win. We didn't win. I think we stayed too long and made some really bad mistakes. But we did t hings right, too. I think important things are worth fighting for, but there's nothing glorious about battles, nothing cool about holding a gun. It's scary and lonely, and too many people die young. never be a person who wants war--hate it with everything you've got. But if you've got to fight to protect people, try to do your job the best you know how. Protecting people is the only reason ever to fight."
pg. 37 - Occasionally something awful, like divorce, can have a good side.
pg.43 - (Grandpa after getting shot in the war.) "I wasn't strong enough to handle it," Grandpa said. "Then a chaplain came over, asked how I was doing. I told him. A nurse was calling him to come quick to the bed of a soldier hurt worse than me. But he grabbed my hand and said the shortest prayer. 'Lord, let this man's best years be ahead of him.' He ran to the other soldier's bed. But that prayer just stuck. I couldn't shake it. I got home a month later. I've never had much luck with the leg, but I say that prayer close to every day."
pg. 44 - House. He turned the word over in his mind. I'm going to my house. I'm going to my mother's house. House was a word he'd always taken for granted. He knew there was a big difference between a house and a home.
pg. 47 - "We're going to grab hold of the first rule of electrical power," Grandpa hollered. "You need a negative charge and a positive one to get something moving. We've got the negative, we're going to find the positive if it kills us."
pg. 57 - ...Some words and the way people say them are like grenades exploding on a battlefield. "Never try to outrun a grenade," said Grandpa. "Just leap away from it, hit the ground, and pray you're far enough away."
pg. 62 - It's funny how life gets so complicated, you don't get to do the things that makes you happy. You have to concentrate on the things that are expected.
pg. 71 - "Do you know the secret to fighting a war?...You've got to hold on to the things you know to be ture, set your mind to a higher place, and fight like a dog to keep it there. War can be so fierce, you can forget the good. Forget what you're about in this world, what's really important. There's always going to be somebody who wants to try to make you forget it. Don't let them."
pg. 73 - "It's rough around here now, I know...We've all lost a piece of ourselves. War does that---it blows things up and leaves an empty place where something important used to be."
pg. 78 - "You've gotta laugh. If you don't, you'll cry."
pg. 96 - That's the thing about winter--it's so easy to forget about the other seasons--it never seems like it will end.
pg. 110 - "Every friend I lost, I still carry in my heart. The paratroopers do it right. They put out an empty boot when one of them dies--no one can fill that shoe. We hear about casualties on the new--114 dead. Two murdered. Over three thousand killed. Numbers don't tell the story. You can't measure the loss of a human life. It's all the things a person was, all their dreams, all the people who loved them, all they hoped to be and could give back to the world. A million moments in a life cut short because of war."
pg. 112 - "Endless bad weather makes you not care much about anything."
pg. 119 - "Sometimes you've got to shout the truth and wake people up." "Sophie, I like to think that truth doesn't need to be shoved down people's throats." "In eighth grade, Aunt Peace, truth needs all the help it can get."
pg. 151 - "It's going to be a long night, folks. Whatever you've learned about getting through hard times, I hope you'll share with the people around you...it's easy at a time like this to remember all the things we've left behind, but what this town has--the most important part of it--is sitting right here in this place."
pg. 155 - You've got to welcome people back when they've been through a war.
pg.161 - The giant oak tree began to bud five days after the flood. Birds were chirping in its branches. Not one limb was out of place. Benches were upended, lesser trees snapped in two. It makes you appreciate a serious root system; roots planted so deep in the ground, holding steady against the storm.
pg. 172 - You've got to be patient to fix a thing right.
pg. 177 - ...we're all fighting a war whether we know it or not--a war for our minds and souls and what we believe in.
pg. 179 - "We're all just ordinary heroes..."
pg. 181 - "I can stop the wind, maybe."
pg. 182 - Tree looked at his grandpa, and he could see the face of war and peace right there, backlit by the sun.
pg. 182 - Everything's got a purpose, really--you just have to look for it.
This was a great book and an easy read. It isn't so much about how tall Tree is but more about analogies in life that keep us moving on and learning. The largest number of life lessons or parables come from Tree's grandpa who fought in the Vietnam War and lost his leg.
It is also great story about how to live through hard things and come out nicely on the other side.