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Slow Way Home

A Novel

ebook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available

On the surface, Brandon Willard seems like your average eight-year-old boy. He loves his mama, peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, and G. I. Joe. But Brandon's life is anything but typical.

Wise beyond his years, Brandon understands he's the only one in this world he can count on. It's an outlook that serves him well the day his mama leaves him behind at the Raleigh bus station and sets off to Canada with "her destiny" — the latest man that she hopes will bring her happiness. The day his mother leaves, Brandon takes the first step toward shaping his own destiny. Soon he sends himself spending pleasant days playing with his cousins on his grandparents' farm and trying to forget the past. In the safety of that place, Brandon finally is able to trust the love of an adult to help iron out the wiry places until his nerves are as steady as any other boy's.

But when Sophie Willard shows up a year later with a determined look in her eye and a new man in tow, Brandon's grandparents ignore a judge's ruling and flee the state with Brandon. Creating a new life and identity in a small Florida town, Brandon meets the people who will fill him with self-worth and self-respect. He slowly becomes involved with "God's Hospital," a church run by the gregarious Sister Delores, a woman who is committed to a life of service for all members of the community, black and white, regardless of some townsfolk's disapproval.

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    The publisher provides the following statement about the accessibility of the EPUB file supplied to OverDrive. Experiences may vary across reading systems. After borrowing the book, you may download the EPUB files to read in another reading system.

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  • Reviews

    • Publisher's Weekly

      July 7, 2003
      A Southern boy becomes a pawn in a dicey custody battle in Morris's uneven second novel, which begins when eight-year-old Brandon Willard's drug addict mother, Sophie, runs off to Canada with the latest man in her life and leaves Brandon with his grandparents in North Carolina. Things unravel with the boyfriend in a hurry, but Sophie's parents refuse to return Brandon, intending to provide him with a stable home. After a court battle, Sophie is awarded custody, but Brandon's grandparents take off with the boy and head for southern Florida, changing their last name to Davidson. Trouble follows the trio after they settle down in a remote fishing village. The African-American church they join is burned down by the Klan after their ill-advised attempt at integration, and Brandon is interviewed by a local TV news crew about the incident. The publicity results in the arrest of his grandparents, and Brandon is returned to Sophie, who has yet another erratic, dangerous boyfriend in tow. In a far-fetched plot twist, the boy is rescued from her clutches by a North Carolina state senator, who remembers Brandon from a school class visit and decides to take him in. Morris's storytelling is solid in the early going, and he makes a credible effort to capture a child's viewpoint, but many of the sets pieces are insistently maudlin. Questionable plot twists—would Brandon's grandparents really leave everything behind?—and treacly writing make this a lackluster follow-up to Morris's well-regarded debut, A Place Called Wiregrass. (Sept. 4)Forecast:A 14-city Southern author tour should help push regional sales, but even those who made
      A Place Called Wiregrass a surprise hit (40,000 copies were sold in less than a year) may find Morris's second novel a disappointment.

    • School Library Journal

      February 1, 2004
      Adult/High School-Will eight-year-old Brandon ever have a permanent, happy home? When his mother runs off with her boyfriend, she sends him to her parents on the bus and disappears, but later, when he has been doing well with them, she threatens to take him back. To keep him safe, the grandparents run from the courts and move further south, where they make friends with both black people and rednecks. Realistic dialogue, including the "n" word, accurately portrays both the integration problems and the role of the church in the South of the early 1970s. The use of the first person enables readers to feel the boy's pain, determination, and desire not to be pitied. He must find strength within himself. Readers find out what happens to these involving characters in an epilogue. A touching, tender story for fans of Nicholas Sparks.-Claudia Moore, W. T. Woodson High School, Fairfax, VA

      Copyright 2004 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      August 1, 2003
      Eight-year-old Brandon Willard has grown increasingly fearful of his mother's boyfriend, who has a quick temper and even quicker fists. When the couple decides to move to Canada, Brandon is handed a bus ticket and told to head to his grandparents' farm in North Carolina. Although Brandon is devastated by his mother's abandonment, his grandparents prove to be loving caretakers. But when his mother returns, his life is once again plunged into chaos; this time, his grandparents take drastic action, and rather than obey the court order to hand Brandon over to his mother, they abscond to Florida with new identities. There they meet larger-than-life black preacher Sister Delores and become involved with her congregation at God's Hospital, where Brandon acquires a deep faith and the knowledge that there are many people who love him. Although some of the characters seem barely to rise above stereotypes, and racism and other issues are treated superficially, this is a compulsively readable novel with many fine passages on the importance of home and the comforts of faith.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2003, American Library Association.)

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Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:5.6
  • Interest Level:9-12(UG)
  • Text Difficulty:4

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