The Off Season

March 6, 2008

514pfgzjejl_ss500_.jpg

I’m beginning to feel like I’m really a YA lit blog pretending to be a general kidslit blog. For someone who used to read very little in the YA department, 2008 is proving to be a YA-rich year thus far. And if I keep finding teen titles as jaw-droppingly good as Catherine Gilbert Murdock’s The Off Season, I don’t imagine my YA kick will end any time soon.

When I read a book I love as much as I love The Off Season, I am almost reluctant to write about it at all, because nothing I write ever captures how completely satisfied I am with that particular book’s wonders. It seems enough to just say, “Go out there. Buy this book. Read it.” The Off Season will more than speak for itself, but I do have a few gushy things to mention. For those of you who’ve been living on a submarine for the past while, Murdock is the author of Dairy Queen, in which the story of the D.J. Schwenk, farm girl and football player extraordinaire, begins. Murdock won the 2006 Borders Original Voices Award for this debut, and you should most definitely begin there as The Off Season picks up right where Dairy Queen ends.

When the story starts, everything is looking good for D.J. Schwenk. She is the first girl linebacker in the history of Red Bend (and perhaps even Wisconsin). She has a sort-of boyfriend (who happens to play for the rival football team – but you can’t have everything). Her family is a bit bonkers, but that’s only normal. She and her best friend Amber seem to be figuring out where their friendship is headed. Then, ever-so-gradually, in the way that so often happens, everything starts crumbling all at once. The novel is mostly about how D.J. faces and grows through this intense period of change, when a lot of what she knows turns upside down. You will not be able to stop reading, and the reason? The voice.

In just about all of the reviews I’ve looked at, everyone mentions “the voice.” D.J. Schwenk is as real a character as you will find in any YA novel. You will feel that if you could just find the right small town, and the right family farm, you could easily find D.J. shooting hoops in the yard or heading out to the barn to get started on the milking. That’s how real her voice sounds. There is something deeply satisfying in reading a true character. This takes you away as much as (or more than) any escapist fiction ever can.

It’s also funny, in a more understated way than Dairy Queen. The whole Schwenk clan is a riot, though never ridiculous or purely comical. This book is about looking for a way to make sense of life when bad things happen, little and big. There’s so much you could dig into with a book group, or in the classroom: family responsibilities, the complexity of sibling relationships, first love, changing realities on family farms, honesty and secrecy in families, friendships and relationships…

So enough already. If you must, spend a minute or two more (but no longer) checking out a few more reviews of The Off Season. Then read it already.

Becky’s Book Reviews
Emily Reads
Jen Robinson

Entry Filed under: Cybils, Teen/YA. .

4 Comments Add your own

  • 1. Jen Robinson  |  March 7, 2008 at 12:46 am

    I love this book so much! I hope that there’s a third book about DJ (not completely necessary, story-wise, but I would so enjoy spending more time with her).

  • 2. Bohae  |  March 7, 2008 at 7:17 am

    If only I could just get up and go pick up this book at a library or bookstore or something… *sighs pathetically*. Why oh why isn’t there a Borders here in Indonesia? (Such a question has been asked by Bohae numerous times in the past.)

  • 3. shelfelf  |  March 7, 2008 at 1:13 pm

    Leave Indonesia. Find a Borders. Buy book. (It’s worth it!)

  • 4. Karen  |  March 7, 2008 at 1:51 pm

    Thanks! You have just chosen one the books I will read over Spring Break for me – I always have trouble narrowing it down!

Leave a Comment

Required

Required, hidden

Some HTML allowed:
<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <pre> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

Trackback this post  |  Subscribe to the comments via RSS Feed


From the Elf herself!

Welcome to Shelf Elf!
WHAT YOU WILL FIND:
A collection of reviews, news, and opinions about books for children and young adults.
WHAT YOU WON'T FIND:
Elf toys. Elf trinkets. Elf carriers. Elf accessories.
Note: The Elf reviews whatever she likes. All hail the Elf.

ON THE ELF'S SHELF:
stuff...
For BOOKS I'VE READ recently head to:

MAKE CONTACT: (get your own nifty email icon here)

Like my Jeremy Tankard Banner?

Subscribe to the Elf

Recently Twittered…

Search Me

Adult Adventure Art Brit Hits Can-Con Challenges Class of 2k9 Crossover Books Cute as all get-out Cybils Fantasy General Graphic Novel Illustration Interviews Just Cool Middle Grade Mystery Non Fiction Openmind Other sites Picture Books Poetry readergirlz Science Fiction SMART Lists Teacher Titles Teen/YA Uncategorized YumYum

Cybils Awards

readergirlz

I'm one of the readergirlz:
new-postergirlz-logo-2
The readergirlz website
The readergirlz forum
readergirlz blog
July's Featured Title:
janes
The Plain Janes by Cecil Castellucci

Raising a Foodie through Reading

Multicultural Kidslit Blogs

Blogroll

Artsy Types – Illustrators to Envy

Groovy Book Related Sites

Shelf Elf’s SMART Lists (Stop Messing Around and Read This)

Archives

Pages

 

March 2008
M T W T F S S
« Feb   Apr »
 12
3456789
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627282930
31  

Meta