Friday, October 9, 2009

Eggs - By Jerry Spinelli

THIS POST CONTAINS SPOILERS! After I finished Nancy Drew, I read Eggs by Jerry Spinelli. I finished the book already. I thought it was very reputable. I thought it told a great story and the characters were very relate-able and believable. You could often feel what how the character felt. The only part I wasn't totally pleased with was the ending. I thought it would be more dramatic. David does learn something important and makes some pretty miraculous changes.

The story was about nine-year-old a boy named David who's mother died a year ago when she slipped on a wet floor and hit her head.This had a big effect on David. He thinks that if he never breaks a rule (to the exception of his grandma's rules) he can bring his mom back. He lives with his grandma and his dad comes home from work on the weekends. He is never kind to his grandma. The day before his mom died, he was going to see the sun rise. Because she died that day, he never got to see the sun rise with her. Now he has made an oath that he will never see the sun rise unless she comes back. I think that David's "obsession" with his mom is interesting and gives him more personality.

David doesn't have any friends. He doesn't want any until he meets a 13-year-old girl named Primrose. Primrose and him fight all the time, but they become good friends. I like their strong friendship and I think they learn a lot from each other. Primrose doesn't have a dad and she hates her mom. (She even bought a trailer and moved into the front yard to get away form her mom.) Primrose is the kind of character you love to hate. (But you don't hate her all the time.) I have to say I was often annoyed with how rude, grumpy, and negative she is, but she changes a lot too.

One day, Primrose and David see a man on television who waves to cars as they go by. The "waving man" stands in the middle of the intersection all day and waves.

I'm going to skip some minor parts in the book. Primrose and David have a huge fight at the end and don't talk to each other. I think this was probably good for them. (They needed some separation.)

After a while, David goes over to Primroses house and Primrose takes him to Philadelphia. I was a little confused. I didn't know why they were going or how they were going to get there. They walk there on the train tracks. They are really nice to each other and Primrose isn't grumpy. Primrose finally tells David that they are going to see the waving man "to see if it is real." (I think this means that he is actually there waving all the time.) If it is real, Primrose is going to ask him why he does waves.

At night, David reads books to Primrose and tells her stories. He reads her to sleep. I thought this was because Primrose has never had anyone read her to sleep and David knew how good it felt. In the morning, Primrose wakes David up early to show him a river. It's sun rise, so he closes his eyes and she leads to a a bridge going over a river. Then David decides to open his eyes and watch the sun rise with Primrose. I couldn't believe he did that! He promised never to watch the sun rise without his mother. I was happy he did that though. It showed that he trusted Primrose a lot. A little while later the police search party finds them and brings them home.

Primrose and David change a lot in this book. Primrose moves back in with her mom and David is always nice to his grandma. I thought the change in both of these characters was equally drastic, however I was hoping for a more eventful ending. I would have liked the ending to be something more dramatic, but it would be hard to make the ending perfect. I could either see it too dramatic or not dramatic enough. This ending wasn't that drastic, but I think that's better than having the ending be too drastic. I think the characters in this book have a lot ahead of them and are going to face many challenges in their life, but they will know how to overcome them because they learned something from each other. All in all I would rate this book a three and a half out of five and I do recommend it as a good book if you are looking for a book.

I commented on Presley's blog.

5 comments:

  1. I read Eggs too. I totally agree about the characters changing a lot throughout the story because when i started the book, Primrose was really weird to me, but i think that by the end of the book she was probably my favorite character, as i began to figure out her story and her background. i thought it was so sad how primrose thought the man in the picture was her father...

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  2. I like the main characters name! I think the author made a really good choice with it! Anyway, that seems like a really weird way to die. Slipping on the floor and bumping your head? Thats something I've never heard to be fatal.

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  3. I read eggs before and I thought it was very much the same way that you described it. The ending I thought was okay, but it seems that was the downer for you. The despriptions of the characters are witty and funny. Primrose is deffinetly one of the antagonists of David but she is also his savior in which she watches the sun rise with him.

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  4. ohhh my goodness! How much do you write about this stuff? Its crazy! I have never read Eggs before but always thought it was a really weird book.[just so ya know, this isn't my real blog thing!i mean, yeah, just forget i said anything!] Ok anyways, that is a really stupid death for the mom. I mean really, slipping on the floor and dying?? Why could she be like jumping off of a cliff and then her bungee cord snaps! Honestly.
    see ya later!

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  5. I don't really like any of his writing.

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