Sunday, October 20, 2013

Roskos, Evan. Dr. Bird’s Advice for Sad Pets.


Roskos, EvanDr. Bird’s Advice for Sad PetsHoughton Mifflin  2013  310p  ISBN 978-0-547-92853-1  hs/adult    Hardback      E-BN  Realistic fiction

James Whitman, as his name suggests, is a poet.  A confused young man, he is often depressed and more often full of anxiety about his dysfunctional family, his relationships at school and his inability to feel good.  Whenever he finds himself in the midst of another bout of depression and/or anxiety, he actually hugs trees, talks to an imaginary dove-psychiatrist named Dr. Bird, yawps like the misfit that he is, and writes poetry.   Unlike the narrator in Walt Whitman’s Song of America, James simply cannot find anything to sing about.  His sister Jorie was expelled from school, and James finds himself on a quest to find out why.  His parents have kicked Jorie out of the house, and James’s role in that catastrophic event reveals itself in the second half of the book.  With the stigma of emotional and mental difficulties “out of the closet,” different authors have treated this topic in a plethora of ways.  In this case, author Evan Roskos has presented the reader with a new twist by having James, realizing that he needs help, hold it together long enough to get a job to earn enough money to see a psychiatrist.  This book is all about relationships, both negative and positive ones, and about self-help.  In a poignant and memorable way, it addresses a very important issue: depression in teens.  James is not a forgettable character.  Because it addresses the issues of teen sex, “cutting,” and depression, and its use of some profanity, this book is best for high-school students and other young adults.      

Summary: Depressed and contemplating suicide almost daily, James Whitman tries to solve the mystery of his sister’s expulsion during her senior year, attempts to find a place in his dysfunctional home, and builds upon old and new relationships to heal himself.

Depression-Fiction, Families-Fiction                        --Martha Squaresky

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