What's the Name of That Book??? discussion

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Query abandoned by poster > ABANDONED. Person carves a storytelling staff. Can't leave till it's finished

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message 1: by Callie (new)

Callie | 2 comments So I remember a book when I was about... 10? 14? Somewhere in there, so sometime between 1999 and 2013. It was about (I think it was a girl) in a tribe who was good at carving. She ended up being the one to carve the next storytelling staff. Some sort of ritual where you can't leave the hut you are in, until the staff is done being made. I wish I could remember more, but i think there was a other person, a guy, who she would find a way to talk to? It's so hard to remember. Anyways I think it was fiction for teens.


message 2: by Kris (last edited Mar 19, 2017 09:14AM) (new)

Kris | 54955 comments Mod
Callie, what's the location - U.S., Canada, Australia, etc.? Desert, Arctic, jungle, prehistoric, etc.? What kinds of animals did the tribe hunt?

What is the staff made of - wood, stone, ivory, etc.?


message 3: by Callie (new)

Callie | 2 comments I don't know the exact location, it was very "tribal" I don't think it was prehistoric or anything though, maybe Native American. The staff was made of wood, it was wood carving. I really wish I remembered more.

For some reason though, I feel like maybe she was blind? I could be mixing up books though -.- my memory is frustrating, sorry.


message 4: by Angela (new)

Angela | 625 comments Is there a chance you might be thinking of Gathering Blue (The Giver, #2) by Lois Lowry Gathering Blue by Lois Lowry?

From Booklist:

"Books for Youth, Middle Readers: /*Starred Review*/ Gr. 5-8. In what might be described as a companion to The Giver (1993), Lowry once again brings readers to an alternative civilization and introduces a young person who will be entrusted to pass on its history. This time, though, she will have the opportunity to plot its future, too. Kira is lame and a recent orphan, so she is not surprised when she is brought before the Council of Guardians to justify her existence. Unexpectedly, she finds a champion who brings her to live in the Council Edifice, where her talent for embroidery and her intuitiveness make her the choice for an important job--repairing the robe of the Singer, who each year sings the history of the world, with the events meticulously embroidered on the robe he wears. At first Kira cannot believe her luck. She makes a friend, Thomas, who carves the Singer's wooden staff, and learns the delicate art of dyeing her threads from a crone who lives outside the village. She is even able to maintain her friendship with the sassy, loyal urchin Matt. Slowly, however, Kira begins to see that all is not right in her world. Lowry is a master at creating worlds, both real and imagined, and this incarnation of our civilization some time in the future is one of her strongest creations. The coarseness and brutality of the people, the abundance of the land's natural resources, and the intricacies of the society make this setting as rich as Kira's most glorious colors. There is richness in the characters, too, all of whom are detailed with fine, invisible stitches. Only the final bit of plotting falters: too much is disclosed too quickly, and answers to questions about how Kira will achieve her objective--to create a kinder future as reflected by her stitchings on the robe--are left as hints (perhaps this bodes well for a sequel). Lowry has clearly addressed the issue of what happens when a young person becomes disillusioned with society; it would be equally interesting to know how she thinks worlds evolve into better places. ((Reviewed June 1 & 15, 2000)) -- Ilene Cooper"


message 5: by Lobstergirl, au gratin (new)

Lobstergirl | 44924 comments Mod
Callie, are you still looking for this or did you find it?


message 6: by Kris (new)

Kris | 54955 comments Mod
No response, moving to Abandoned folder.

Callie (OP) was last active on the site in March 2017.


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Gathering Blue (other topics)

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Lois Lowry (other topics)