Friday, April 27, 2012

Module 15: Olive's Ocean

Book Summary:  Martha is approached after Olive’s death and realized that they could have been great friends, but due to the extreme shyness of Olive they were not.  They both wanted to be writers and kept an ocean of secrets inside.  Throughout the summer after Olive’s death Martha begins to see how delicate life was through the stories and frailty of her grandmother and her near drowning.  She begins to realize that life could change in a single minute.  

My Impressions: When I think of books by Kevin Henkes I often think of cute little creatures with moral issues.  However, this novel by Henkes did not disappoint me when looking for a message about an issue about life and friends.  I was shocked that this book was on a banned book list.  I may have never chosen to read it with a group of students for that fact, but this helped me realize that some banned books are awesome literature!
Professional Review: School Library Journal - Gr 5-8-As Martha and her family prepare for their annual summer visit to New England, the mother of her deceased classmate comes to their door. Olive Barstow was killed by a car a month earlier, and the woman wants to give Martha a page from her daughter's journal. In this single entry, the 12-year-old learns more about her shy classmate than she ever knew: Olive also wanted to be a writer; she wanted to see the ocean, just as Martha soon will; and she hoped to get to know Martha Boyle as "she is the nicest person in my whole entire class." Martha cannot recall anything specific she ever did to make Olive think this, but she's both touched and awed by their commonalities. She also recognizes that if Olive can die, so can she, so can anybody, a realization later intensified when Martha herself nearly drowns. At the Cape, Martha is again reminded that things in her life are changing. She experiences her first kiss, her first betrayal, and the glimmer of a first real boyfriend, and her relationship with Godbee, her elderly grandmother, allows her to examine her intense feelings, aspirations, concerns, and growing awareness of self and others. Rich characterizations move this compelling novel to its satisfying and emotionally authentic conclusion. Language is carefully formed, sometimes staccato, sometimes eloquent, and always evocative to create an almost breathtaking pace. Though Martha remains the focus, others around her become equally realized, including Olive, to whom Martha ultimately brings the ocean.-Maria B. Salvadore, formerly at District of Columbia Public Library Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.
Library Uses: 
·       Banned Books Display during Banned Books Week
·       With students 6-8 in the library this book can lead into a discussion about family trees.  As a group, create a family tree for the Boyle family.  Have students create their own family trees and display in the library for students and families to see. 
·       On page 175 Martha tries to write a poem about her near death experience.  Reread this poem and have students create several first lines of poems about their own experiences and have them share with the group.

Ellis, S. [Review of the book Olive's Ocean by K. Henkins]. (2003,
November/December). Horn Book Magazine, 79(6), 745-
747.

Henkes, K. (2003).  Olive’s ocean.  New York: Greenwillow
Books.

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