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Matasha

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

"Beautifully renders the slow-motion alchemy of growing up; mesmerizing and memorable."
KIRKUS (starred review)

"Matasha evokes a time and a place and a childhood with startling honesty and clarity, honoring the intelligence of a curious younger reader and the sophistication of an older reader alike. I'll follow Pamela Erens anywhere, and am not surprised that this is where she's led me: to a brilliant, hilarious, sharp-edged novel for everyone."—REBECCA MAKKAI,author of The Great Believers

"Authentic, witty, and painful, Matasha is a delightful middle grade debut, crammed with delicious period details. Matasha, an only child, must navigate awkward friendships, growth-hormone treatments, and parents who always bewilder and disappoint. A 1970s coming-of-age story that rings true of then—and now."—MARINA BUDHOS, author, The Long Ride and Watched

"Matasha's brave and original heroine reminds me of Harriet the Spy and Blubber, her perspective captivating and inimitable. It's a joy to watch Matasha grow up, making meaning of everything. This novel has tremendous sweep and scope, with all the joys, sorrows, and revelations of a real girlhood."—RACHEL DEWOSKIN, author of Big Girl Small, Blind, and Someday We Will Fly

"The narrator of Matasha may be small for her age but she is years ahead of her peers in how she faces a growing series of challenges. Matasha has to deal with the casual cruelty of her classmates, her growing alienation from her longtime best friend, her increasing awareness of her mother's dissatisfaction, and her own health issues, handling them all with a thoughtfulness that feels realistic (especially when interrupted by the occasional spectacular temper tantrum). Readers of all ages will enjoy seeing 1970s Chicago from her vantage point." —MICHELLE FALKOFF, author of Playlist for the Dead and How to Pack for the End of the World

"Tender, funny, and endlessly surprising, Matasha perfectly captures the confusion of being an eleven year old girl and trying to solve all of life's mysteries, big and small. This wonderful book—and the wonderful girl at its center—will stay with me for a very long time."—ROBIN WASSERMAN, author, Girls on Fire, The Book of Blood and Shadow and Hacking Harvard

It's 1970's Chicago. Eleven-year-old Matasha Wax is in the sixth grade and just starting to feel the pressures of growing up. Her best friend Jean has been blowing her off, while her parents are in a standoff over her mother's desire to adopt a refugee from Vietnam. And while the bullies in school have started to grow breasts and inches, Matasha remains a puny four-foot-four – which means she will need growth hormone shots, and she is terrified of needles. Apart from her daily reading of the advice columns in the newspaper, keeping up with the Patty Hearst and Watergate scandals, and tracking her parents' deteriorating marriage, Matasha is fixated by the story of Martin Kimmel, a nine-year-old boy who disappeared a few months ago, and whose body has yet to be found. But none of these ongoing problems could have prepared Matasha for her mother's sudden disappearance. When the letters start coming from Switzerland, she knows something is very, very wrong – but no one will tell her what's going on, so Matasha has to figure it all out for herself. A tale of growing up and growing apart, Matasha is a poignant look at resilience in the face of adolescent loneliness, divorce, bullying and slow development. Pamela...

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    • Kirkus

      Starred review from May 1, 2021
      It's a life-changing year for a sixth grader on the threshold of puberty in 1970s Chicago. The only child of affluent Jewish parents, Matasha, 11, is a budding novelist. She's also tiny. Although her precocity and slight stature have targeted her for bullying at her private school, she fears and resists the daily growth-hormone injections her doctor proposes. She clings to Jean, her only friend, but their fraying friendship breaks after Matasha, whose imagination has fixated on a missing boy from their neighborhood, pressures her into searching for his body. When Jean turns on her, Matasha's loneliness deepens; bullying induces self-lacerating shame, but she survives. In the grim-faced photo of the Vietnamese girl her mother wants to adopt, Matasha fears a potential bully, then feels guilty when her attorney father dismisses the project. It's a cold household: her father rarely home; her mother self-absorbed; their Polish housekeeper kind but distant. Although family dysfunction leads Matasha to a shocking discovery, her parents' emotional disengagement has a freeing upside: It begets agency, if she has the courage to choose it and keep writing. Lauded author Erens' middle-grade debut unfolds at a steady, measured pace, a successful stylistic departure from prevailing trends toward dialogue-heavy, present-tense narration. Matasha's journey captures in rich, pellucid detail the experiments, missteps, humiliations, and hard-won victories that will form her adult self. Beautifully renders the slow-motion alchemy of growing up; mesmerizing and memorable. (Fiction. 10-14)

      COPYRIGHT(2021) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      June 1, 2021
      Grades 5-8 In 1970s Chicago, Matasha (not Natasha!) is 11 and in the sixth grade, living with her Jewish parents (a quirky mother and semi-stuffy father) who are at odds, and struggling with the fact that her best (and only) friend is blowing her off. What could make things worse? Matasha is short--four feet, four inches, to be precise. If she doesn't start growing on her own, she'll need to go on growth hormone injections. Did she mention her all-encompassing fear of needles? She obsesses over a missing neighborhood boy, newspaper advice columns, and the national scandals of the day until her mother runs off to Switzerland with a former flame. Through it all, Matasha is uncompromisingly herself--not always likable, but sincere and growing, literally and figuratively, along the way. Erens has captured a slice in time and created a plucky, true-to-herself protagonist who will appeal to fans of Holly Goldberg Sloan's Counting by 7s (2013) and Hayley Long's Sophie Someone (2017).

      COPYRIGHT(2021) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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