Book Review: The Family Under the Bridge

Image result for the family under the bridgeThe Family Under the Bridge by Natalie Savage Carlson is about an old hobo named Armand who one day discovers a family under his bridge. Three kids, a single mother, and their dog, Armand is taken aback. He can’t stand “starlings” as he calls them. Yet the children quickly endear themselves to Armand.

While the mother is working, Armand takes the children to see Father Christmas since Christmas is only a few days away. They all ask for a house from Father Christmas. The children were taken out of school as well so the authorities would not take them away from their mother if they found out they were homeless. All the children desperately want to go back to school.

However, two women discover the children alone under the bridge and head to the authorities. Armand takes the children and their mother to live with the gypsies. However, the gypsies are soon run off as well when one of the gypsies is sought after by the police for cutting down a rare Christmas tree.

Homeless again, the children desperately want a home. It is here that Armand finally decides to take a real job instead of being a hobo. He happens to find a caretaker job where housing is included. In the end, this make-shift family finally has a home.

Written in 1958, this book won the Newbery Honor Award in 1959. If you keep this in mind and use it to study the times it was written in, then this is a good book. There are some elements in this book that you’d never see in a modern book like the cutting down of a rare tree for Christmas. Also, at one point, Armand uses the children to sing so they can collect money for food. And I don’t agree with the fact Armand is a professional hobo. Also, the mother is racist against the gypsies and looks down upon them the entire book.

However, the underlying story is endearing. The children “stole Armand’s heart” by begging to stay with him. Armand’s character arch is impressive as well, going from a life-long beggar, content to not work and saying so, to
beginning to be ashamed of begging as it takes away a man’s self-respect.” In the end, Armand becomes a “workingman of Paris.”

My kids are old enough that when these parts cropped up, we talked about it, and why those parts of the book are wrong. It’s also interesting and telling of the time period when you read these views from so long ago, which spark a discussion of how our thinking has changed.

Good, short read containing lots of teachable moments. Plus, it shows how people can change no matter how old they are.

Lizzie Bright and the Buckminster Boy

Image result for lizzie brightLizzie Bright and the Buckminster Boy by Gary Schmidt is on the surface a typical new kid on the block book.  Turner Buckminster has just moved from Boston to the small community of Phippsburg, Maine in 1911.  His father has taken a job as the local pastor.  Turner immediately gets into trouble and trouble keeps finding him.  He accidentally skips a rock into a neighbor’s fence.  He’s caught with his pants down by this same neighbor as he tries to wash blood out of his pants so his parents won’t find out.  And he visits Malaga Island, a place where African-Americans live, and befriends a girl named Lizzie Bright Griffin.

The community wants all the island inhabitants to move so they can build a resort on the island.  And they are giving the residents no choice.  Turner becomes good friends with Lizzie and Turner’s father is beginning to tire of the town trying to force him to side with them.  He’s “somewhere between two worlds and drowning because he couldn’t find his way in either one.”

Turner inherits a house in the town and wants to give it to Lizzie.  The community is in an uproar.  They force the inhabitants to leave and burn their houses down.  Turner, distraught, attacks the sheriff of the town.  His father comes to his defense but in the struggle takes a bad fall off a cliff.  Lizzie has moved away and Turner is left reeling.  Can the soul of a whale help?

Great story with twists at the end I would have never predicted.  Laugh-out-loud funny as Turner finds himself always in predicaments that land him in trouble. “Maybe it wasn’t such a terrible thing to be a dang fool sometimes.  Maybe, he thought, it was just what you were supposed to be.”  Touching story of a forbidden friendship.  Powerful tale of doing what’s right when the rest of society says no.  “Who knows where these ideas will take us.  But wouldn’t it be exciting to find out.”

Newbery Honor Book for 2005.  You won’t want to miss this one!  Highly recommended.  Great historical novel of racial divisions.  Themes are timeless.