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Playing Beatie Bow (2001)

Playing Beatie Bow (2001)

Book Info

Author
Genre
Rating
3.95 of 5 Votes: 4
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ISBN
1903015111 (ISBN13: 9781903015117)
Language
English
Publisher
barn owl books

About book Playing Beatie Bow (2001)

Fourteen-year-old Abigail is having a rough time. Her parents separated four years ago when her father left the family for a young girlfriend, but now he wants to reunite with his wife and move from Sydney to Norway. But her life takes a truly unexpected turn when she sees a group of younger children playing a game she's never encountered before, called 'Beatie Bow.' Another odd girl watches from the shadows -- and when Abby follows her, she finds herself transported a hundred years into the past. Much as I wanted to love this book, its primary effect has been to make me want to barf. The story has a nice idea and goal. Abigail is very resentful of both of her parents -- her father for abandoning the family, and her mother for now wanting to forgive him and drop the life she's created for herself without him. The author wants to bring her heroine to an understanding of what drives adults to behave this way, and bring the family into harmony. And some of the way this is achieved is pretty interesting. The Rocks area of Sydney is presented with fair historical accuracy so far as I can tell -- it's full of poverty and danger and illness. The Bow family, who take Abigail in for the duration of her stay in the past, are also realistically portrayed, both loving each other and getting on each other's nerves at the same time. And I'm not sure how long Abigail was actually supposed to have been stuck in history, but her hair grows a few inches and her figure "starts to come in" at last, so she does change physically as well as emotionally while she's there. But I found the rest of the story to be a steaming heap of meh mixed with some points that made me just plain angry. Warning: Slightly spoilericious from here on! Abigail is presented as a pretty unlikable character at the beginning of the story -- and why is she unlikable? Because she hasn't been kind and supportive enough to her mother, and therefore she must be a terrible person. And because she can't understand why her father had to dump his wife and child just because he fell in love with another woman. And maybe because she doesn't feel sorry for her father when it appears his girlfriend has now dumped him in order to move to Canada. (I don't feel sorry for him, either.) So, despite the insistence that Abigail is in the past to perform a favor for the Bow family, the real purpose of the whole story is to force her to become a nice daughter who will believe that "adults are just as deserving of happiness as children are." (As if children and parents enjoy the same level of autonomy and power in a family, or in society.) I'm not arguing that adults need to entirely subsume themselves to their children, but come on -- in this story, the adults are jerking Abigail all over the place emotionally, while acting like 14-year-olds themselves, and she's the one who's presented as needing to "grow up"?! (Although, since her parents are clearly hopeless, I suppose she's the only person in her family with a chance at maturity.) Then, the way this is achieved is by having Abigail "fall in love" with 18-year-old Judah, the eldest son of the Bow family (and a "man, not a boy" due to living a hundred years earlier). But Judah is promised to someone else, and Abigail's "love" never develops beyond an age-appropriate 14-year-old crush. Yet somehow, this is what makes her understand her parents, and why her father had to act on his crush. And that understanding of "love" makes everything okay, and turns Abigail into a wonderful person. The ending-ending, where she meets Judah's descendant/reincarnation four years later and they instantly recognize their enduring love for one another, had me gagging and rolling my eyes to an extent that I'm lucky my face didn't freeze that way (although at least it would be okay for today and tomorrow ... :-) I probably would have liked this book as a child. But from my adult perspective, the story felt overly-contrived, and I really can't like a book with such a preachy and potentially seriously guilt-inducing message for children. And frankly, I preferred "terrible" Abigail at the beginning of the story to "wonderful" Abigail at the end.

I realised just last night that 'blanky' is a substitute for 'bloody'. Kudos, Penguin. What is the point of this when the book as good as tells us that certain characters are involved in prostitution and shows two alcoholic characters in pitiful detail? "Oh, gee, guys, you can read about the worst parts of 19th-century Sydney, but we won't include swearing because this is the late 80s and we're too genteel for that. You might learn some bad words." I'm going to pretend that the bit about Beatie scoffing at forbidden topics is RP having a go at the publishers. ;)That diatribe aside, 'Playing Beatie Bow' is a good book. It is no time-travel paradox or dry historical novel, but straight-up coming-of-age YA - and yes, there is a romantic subplot. This will turn off some people, no doubt.Just as she's coming to terms with a shock in her life, fourteen-year-old Abigail Kirk is transported back in time to the late nineteeth century in her native Sydney. As a more jaded or experienced reader than I am might expect, she ends up discovering more about herself. What I like about Abigail is that she's selfish and unlikable, like many teenagers, but she is also refreshingly adult, as most of us aren't.Abigail must face some home truths about herself, but it is the titular Beatie Bow in particular who steals the show and makes the book what it is.The setting, too, is portrayed in vivid and engrossing detail. If you can get past the dated slang and the totally unrealistic voice for a fourteen-year-old, this makes for a memorable read.The secondary characters aren't especially complex, save perhaps (and surprisingly) for the wretched alcoholic named Doll, but what sketches we have of them are vibrant.

Do You like book Playing Beatie Bow (2001)?

I still love this book (it has been my fourth time now). Abigail is a kind of anti-heroine, but her personality is interestingly multi-faceted, Beatie and the rest of the Bow Family are so entertainingly vivid and Abigail's time-travel-experience is believably painted in loving detail (up to the accent of the Scottish immigrants and their Glasgow Marble patterned woolen stockings).There is no denying that the ending is cotton candy pink; it successfully underlines the two - disputable - messages the author is trying to shout in our direction: a) Real love on first sight exists b) The ability to love deeply and truly is not connected to age or experience.30 years old and recommended!
—oliviasbooks

Abby Kirk, flat-chested lonely unsociable 14, "raged and sulked" p 23 when mother Jan 36 wants to rejoin unfaithful husband in Norway "love is a thing you have to experience before you know how powerful it can be" p 19. Abby "dumbstruck" p 163 repeats mother's advice. If theme is 'power of love' (cue music "and now the violins" p 26), vanquishes time, why is title about career-driven spinster?Emphasis on working-class lifestyle history, geography, child grows up, same as https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/7.... Pretty turns of phrase. May appeal to teen wanting to grow up. 1*? Despite talented pleasing style and holiday in past, unasked-for lessons provoke anger, feeling of being cheated. Love is puzzling emotion, but doubtfully hormone dose that transforms child to adult without physical intrusion, just pulse thudding (yet more convincing than Queen's intervention for pharaoh's tomb goblet). Uneasy sense of checklist for awards judges / curriculum educators. Subject of niche-group audience age 'loves', grows up (finds 'real' love when 'old' 19?). Lessons: geography - streets, landmarks; history - diet, costumes, occupations (jobs, pastimes), politics, economy, customs, immigrants. Senses: sewage stink, street clamor, colors and feel of upper-class vs working-class dress (bright silks, soft furs, vs drab, scratchy homespun). Author clever to note only high-class fancy colorful outfits survive, confusing modern collector. Victorian way of life seems authentic, break from typical aristocratic romance. Along lines of born in poverty author Catherine Cookson who lived lives she wrote https://www.goodreads.com/review/show... Neighbor Natalie Bow 4, persecuted by brother Vincent 6 dubs watcher fascinated with playground game "furry girl" for hair very short, like fur on animal. Children chant observer's name in rhyme, fearful when another under sheet advances menacingly. Beatie 11 speeds away when Abby chases "to talk" into alley .. and smelly streets of horses and beggars. Running after and frightening smaller child 'to talk' makes no sense. Beatrice Bow's family unselfishly shelters, feeds, clothes and nurses penniless useless injured 'Stranger'. Gran from Scottish Orkney Isles has foretold - one die, one barren, and Stranger save family Gift of Prophecy, seeing, and traveling, future. After wrong houses, odd dialect, long dresses, gas lamps, wood fires, Queen Victoria portraits, many hints, Abby finally asks the year - 1873 p 45. Why does she take so long to clue in? She is an angry, mean, selfish, prideful, pampered, thoughtless, brainless brat, nasty for all four years since landmark skyscraper architect "fell in love with" p 19 much younger secretary Jan, and left marriage of 12 years p 19. Kid pouts oh-so sorry for herself. Chamber pot - Dovey who limps from childhood injury carries, empties and cleans dish; odor from clothes and bodies - little fresh water, hard to wash; scratchy clothing layers - others' best or bought special. Author picks on younger brothers yet has them grow up good; invalid Gibby whines for attention - after his fever, all believe he is one predicted to die by Gran. (view spoiler)[ Again Abby tears blindly, this time away from Beatie, down strange alleys and into trouble, caught for madam, whose own neice is a drunk diseased ruin at 21, set to guard the newcomer. She does wiggle out of bindings and window. Judah and pals drop ropes and lead fugitive across rooftops. (hide spoiler)]
—An Odd1

At first i thought this would be a pretty lame book, because i had to read it for school, and so far i haven't encountered a good book when it came to my english teacher and her lame choices. And maybe partly because it was written even before i was born in 1980. But i found that i actually enjoyed it.Ruth Park did a good job on this book, she wrote it well and really did her research on what life was like for poor people in Sydney in 1800's. Even right down to the way they spoke. It seemed like it really was 1873 and not something the author just made up off the top of her head.
—Hannah

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