Mock Newbery 2026 discussion
Newbery 2018
>
July Read - Orphan Island - what did you think?
date
newest »

message 1:
by
LS
(new)
Jun 22, 2017 04:15PM

reply
|
flag


I too look forward to hearing the experience of others when reading this.


This is my review for Orphan Island:
I enjoyed Orphan Island immensely. It was quite an exciting page turner. Jinny and Ess are irresistible characters. Impossible not to empathize and root for Jinny throughout the book. I do wish the author provided some answers at Orphan Island's conclusion. A sequel is definitely necessary. I won't give anything away but there was little payout in the end. I do think the book's core audience will be ultimately dissatisfied. Just an extra sentence or two showing hope, disaster, anything would have been great. The ride was terrific for me so it I'm giving it 5 stars.
A lot of people commenting on Orphan Island are looking at it through the eyes/mind of an adult solely, it seems. I try my very best to take a child's view into account. I don't think the average middle grade reader is going to be considering the metaphor angles during most if any of the book. He or she want's to know are they all really orphans, where the boat comes from and where it goes, why is the imagery all beautiful and happy then it becomes unsettling and dangerous when you go against what is expected. Yes, a lot of it appears to be about leaving the safe world of childhood and the uncertainty that follows. But it is also an adventure/sci fi book. I am fairly certain the kids picking up Orphan Island think something otherworldly and fantastical is what the book is about and how the book will end.


Personally, I enjoyed Orphan Island so much more than last year's Newbery honor award winners (excluding the picture book that won an honor). The writing and imagery were absolutely top notch. I felt like I was stranded there with the gang.



I thought the first chapter was great. There was great tension and a lot of ground rules were subtlety laid.
From there on, the book became very, very boring. I strongly disliked Jinny. Sometimes an unlikeable main character is intentional on the author's part. I didn't feel like Jinny was. I got the feeling the author wanted her to be endearing to readers. I didn't get that. She was selfish and whiny and the thought-provoking questions she asked weren't near as thought-provoking as intended.
I also felt like Annabelle's library of books was too contrived of a plot device to give the kids on the island knowledge of the way the world works. This didn't fly. The kids are far too smart than they should be and know things they shouldn't. The library of books isn't enough for me. It's sloppy storytelling and world-building.
The metaphor angle doesn't pass for me either because this wasn't simply a metaphor in the same way Spinelli's Hokey Pokey was. There is heavy foreshadowing throughout and snippets and clues given that could answer many of the questions that arise about the island. To not address any of them, is a copout.
I thought the author was far too present in this and I thought the metaphor angle was too heavy handed. Sometimes I felt the author was posing questions about life that didn't always ring true to Jinny's personality. I felt like some of them were forced.
The Giver is a good comparison, but The Giver supplied its readers with FAR more answers than this book did.
I believe those hoping for a sequel will be waiting awhile. The author wrote this because she was tired of writing for other people and wanted to write for herself. To write a sequel to appease the masses would go against that. She admitted to having a prologue that explained the creation of the island in a mysterious way but a friend read it and advised her to not include it in the story and let the readers wonder. It makes me wonder how good the prologue was and if the explanation of the island would have been a let down. Without explaining anything, it's easy to hide behind the "it's a metaphor" explanation.
I guess in closing, my biggest beef with this story was that I felt myself WAY more interested in the island than I was the characters. I think the author wanted readers to be far more interested in the characters. The characters were nothing special to me. The island could have been.

https://nerdybookclub.wordpress.com/2...
EDIT: Okay! I'm back at my computer so I can write more. It's been a while since I've picked up a book where I told myself I'm just going to read a little bit and end up getting out of bed, moving to the couch at 11:30 at night, and finishing the whole thing. The world that Laurel Snyder created in Orphan Island was so compelling to me. For some reason it reminded me of Baby Island. I was curious to see how the older kids would care for the younger ones (what rules they created, the stories they passed down, etc). If the book had been just about that I would have liked it. However, on top of that, was the huge mystery of the Island--who created it, who is Abigail, why do the natural laws of our world not apply here, etc. The whole time I was reading it I was trying to figure out what genre it fits into. Fantasy? Sci-fi? Adventure? Mystery? I appreciated Jinny's character and thought her character arc was accurate to what many kids feel as they transition to becoming teens and then adults. Yes, I wanted more from the book when it ended but I appreciated that it allowed me make up my own ending. It stuck with me in a way it might not have if everything was tied up in a neat little bow. I plan on book talking this one this upcoming school year. I am curious to see how my students react to it.

I appreciate the link. I have been a fan of the author for years. Most of today's readers whether it is a child or adult doesn't need or even want the perfect, tidy wrap up bow. Orphan Island has been released for a few weeks now. I hope the title will be on several summer reading lists. It will be great to know what the children thought of this book.

I feel like this is the new The Giver. I hope there isn't a sequel. I feel Lois Lowry ruined her amazing book by tying up loose ends. I loved how thought provoking the ending of The Giver was and should have stayed that way. I feel like Orphan Island is just like that and hope there is no sequel or trilogy. I think it will lose its impact if it's all tied up, because I think having trust and not knowing what the future brings, was the whole point of the story.
Just my humble opinion, but this and Lucky Broken girl are my top two faves for newbery.

Completely agree...


I agree with Natalie. I also loved Orphan Island. I remember being Jinny's age--torn between do I stay in and listen to the adult conversations or do I go outside to play because I still really wanted to go outside and play.
When I read the ending, I thought about this meme that says: Can I just be a kid again? No worries, no pain, just fun.
That is what I think the ending meant. Jinny knew deciding to be an adult was like a trick. There does not need to be a sequel. The ending was just fine.

Julie--I agree. Totally reminded me of the Giver. Very powerful.

I adored the Giver. If I read it every day of my life I would not be bored with it. Although I enjoyed Orphan Island I don't see the similarities.

Agreed. The more I think about it, the more it starts to feel more sci-fi like way more was going on with the island than the author wrote. There needed to be more explanation because it seemed like the parents were just sending the kids to the island until they were mature and called them back to rehabilitate in society.

I considered it a predominantly sci-fi book from the very beginning. Your take is interesting. If a society is going to send away their kids I'm not sure why they would do it during their early, formative years. Especially if they have no one to really guide and shape them. Just other youth who aren't clued in to what's happening either. Then want them back during their early teen and teen years. Doesn't seem like the most thought out plan to me :)

Or maybe Jinny has a typical child's egocentric view of the world, believing that external events are controlled by her.


This also came to me as I thoughtfully read. Getting back in the boat to return to what, where, who reminded me of death. No one knows what is on the other side and won't knowbuntil one "gets back in the boat."



It was a fabulous Elizabeth Bird review. I am looking forward to reading the comments on it.


I have to agree with you...https://revingsblog.blogspot.com/2017...




From there on, the book became very, very boring. I strongly disliked Jinny. Sometimes an unlikeable main character is intentional on the author's part. I didn't feel like Jinny was. I got the feeling the author wanted her to be endearing to readers. I didn't get that. She was selfish and whiny and the thought-provoking questions she asked weren't near as thought-provoking as intended."
I totally agree with you! This book was a big letdown for me as a reader. Started very strong, but just fizzled. As soon as she refused to take the boat at her appointed time, I knew that she'd ride off at the very end, so the ending didn't bother or surprise me. But what happened in between was just disappointing. No big revelations, no earth-quake, no good conflicts. Am I really supposed to be impressed that she called out the grumpy girl?! Once. And then felt bad. She needs a lot more practice at that if she's actually going to be transitioning into the teenage years!
Other people's comparisons to The Giver actually make me angry. That book was awesome! The only similarity is the very ending in which she leaves and takes a young boy with her. But in The Giver, the protagonist figured things out and knew he was saving the baby from death. Jinny has no clue what she is leaving nor where she is headed. She could be sentencing Loo to death by taking him on that boat. Not to mention Jinny may have caused Loo to fall ill. Again, I really disliked Jinny and I disliked the weak plot.



I didn't find Jinny flawed at all. Her actions and thoughts were pretty realistic. Jinny seemed to be the only young person to question and actually rebel against that boat going to whoknowswhere from whoknowswhere. If this were my posse when I was growing up it would've been the rare one of us not to get on that boat kicking and screaming.

If a child reads this book, puts it down, walks away, and never thinks about it again, she or he hasn't really "finished" the book. Because the plot does nothing but set up Jinny's leap into the unknown. What is "out there"? (Is Deen "out there"?) How should Jinny act towards those around her? Is she responsible for anyone other than herself? What's more important - rules or feelings?
I thought the strength of the book was in the development of the characters and in the descriptions of the island and lifestyle. Snyder did the reader a favor in NOT answering all of his or her questions about how the children ended up on the island, the mysterious appearance of the green boat and the new child, the continuing isolation of the island, and so on.
Whether this wins any awards or not, it would be a fantastic book to read and discuss and discuss and discuss in a middle-grade classroom.