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Paperback Mercy's Birds Book

ISBN: 0887764630

ISBN13: 9780887764639

Mercy's Birds

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

Learning to accept help can be the hardest lesson of all. Mercy doesn't have your average family, but it's the only one she's ever known. She, her mother Pearl, and her aunt Moo move from one... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

"Birds" flies

"Mercy's Birds" is a rare book -- a book that is actually quite like real life, without being depressing or unrealistic. It's a vivid, poetic, bittersweet look at things like clinical depression, poverty, child abuse, and Linda Holeman does a wonderful job of bringing them to life.Mercy lives with her mother Pearl and her Aunt Moo, both impoverished and eking out a meager living with the help of Moo's boyfriend Barry (known as B), who is off in Indonesia. One day, Mercy chops off her blonde hair and dyes it black. It's only one of the ways she is trying to harden herself against the ever-worsening conditions of her life: Her mother's sinking depression, her aunt's blossoming alcoholism, and B's sexual advances (and threats if she tells on him).At her new school, Mercy has few friends, even though a girl called Andrea is trying to befriend her. The only people she really communicates with is her Italian-American boss, Vince, and the kindly Mamma Gio. But Mercy's already-difficult life takes a sharp downward turn when Pearl overdoses on pills, and B announces that he's returning.Things are bad when "Mercy's Birds" starts, and they only improve near the end. Even then, it's not improvements that defy belief. Rather, it's about a fractured, battered family growing back together, and gaining a strong little circle of friends. There's no perky "happily ever after," but things are winding up to become happier and brighter.Holeman's writing is very vivid, and full of symbolism (such as the bright mask that Mercy creates, or her stiff black hair). She doesn't milk tragedy or sadness for sympathy, and the background she makes for each character is very realistic. And even though the world Mercy lives in is in some ways a very dark place, Holeman reminds us that dreams can still come true.Mercy is not your typical troubled teen. As we see, her angst and anger are a way of coping with the very real problems of her life, especially problems she can't deal with alone. Her mom is virtually a nonentity, and Aunt Moo is at least trying to make an impression, even if she doesn't quite know how. Good supporting characters are the twinkly-eyed Italian widow Mama Gio and her son Vince."Mercy's Birds" is a unique book, and not one just for young adults. Beautiful, bittersweet, and will linger in your mind after you finish it. Highly recommended.

Touched my life.......

"Nothing - not bird claws, and not fingers, especially not B's fingers - would ever tangle themselves in my hair again, scaring me, holding me prisoner." Mercy Donnelly has just started a new high school at the end of October, and her fellow grade 10 classmates are reluctant to accept her dark wardrobe and short, choppy jet-black hair. Mercy rarely lets anyone get close to her, and isolates herself from the world. To make matters worse, her life at home is no better. Her mother, Pearl, is slowly falling into a deep depression, and most of her time is spent lying awake on her bed, staring at her plain walls and closed curtains that haven't been opened in months. Mercy's aunt, Maureen (whom Mercy has always called "Moo"), has just chosen a new boyfriend to bring into their home. His real name hasn't yet been announced, for Mercy and Pearl always refer to him as "B". B is away for work at the moment, and while he is away, Mercy is trying to sum up the courage to tell Moo or Pearl about what he's been saying to her, and doing to her when they're alone. However, it's hard for her to do this because Pearl doesn't have a job and the money that Moo and Mercy make doesn't add up to enough to support them, so B's monthly checks are what they've been living on. However, Mercy knows it's in her best interest to stand up for herself and what she knows is the right thing to do.Mercy's life finally takes a small turn for the better when she makes a new friend at school, Andrea. Andrea is an outgoing, yet not overly interesting person, but is a great help for Mercy to have around. Also, Mercy's routine of working at the local flower shop is relaxing and therapeutic for her, and helps to take her stress off. She also finds hope through the storeowner, Vince, and his mother whom everyone calls "Mamma Gio." Yet suddenly, everyone is abruptly shaken and woken up with a jolt when Pearl overdoses on a bottle of painkillers and winds up in a psychiatric ward of a hospital nearby. Mercy and Moo are forced to deal with the feelings and situations that arise because of this startling news. This is one of the novels that I can relate to the closest out of the ones I've read before. Mercy and I have a lot in common, and I feel like I'm reading a novel about myself in some ways. I wouldn't recommend this novel to everyone, because I think that it only applies to certain personality types. I also wouldn't recommend it to everyone because I feel like I'd be sharing things with people that I just want to be my own. I know that that sounds extremely selfish, but there are certain exceptions to novels that are this touching. Yet at the same time, I want to recommend this novel to everyone, hoping that they can too get as much out of it as I did. However, this book has been really inspiring and helpful to me, and will hopefully help others the same way that it has helped me.

Mercy's Birds rings with truth.

Mercy's Birds, by Linda Holeman, is an excellent book. Readers of Judy Blume and other so called "realistic Young Adult fiction" will appreciate Holeman's realistic portrayl of Mercy, a bright young lady with some very serious problems. 15-yr-old Mercy has chosen to wear nothing but black, in response to her messed-up home life and other factors. Her teen angst is real; Mercy is facing some very serious problems. There is no sugar coating here - everyone in Mercy's world is messed up, and there are no pat answers. What makes this book unique and wonderful is the insightful way that Mercy views her world and analyzes her problems. Holeman manages to give us a book in which the characters face serious and sad problems, yet with an uplifting ending. The moral of this story is that being true to yourself is the most important thing one can do, no matter what scary things one is facing. I highly reccomend this book for young adults, but also for those who work with young adults, troubled or otherwise. This book will make you remember what it's like to be 15.
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