Sunday, September 20, 2020

WINK by Rob Harrell

 


Realistic Fiction, Cancer, Friendship, Families, Middle School, Courage...with humor

316 pages.

Description

After being diagnosed with a rare eye cancer, twelve-year-old Ross discovers how music, art, and true friends can help him survive both treatment and middle school.

Kirkus Reviews (December 1, 2019)

A rare form of cancer takes its toll in this novel based on the author’s experience. Seventh grader Ross Maloy wants nothing more than to be an average middle schooler, hanging out with his best friends, Abby and Isaac, avoiding the school bully, and crushing on the popular girl. There’s just one thing keeping Ross from being completely ordinary: the rare form of eye cancer that’s reduced him to the kid with cancer at school. Ross’ eye is closed in a permanent wink, and he constantly wears a cowboy hat to protect his eyes. The doctors are hopeful that Ross will be cancer free after treatment, but his vision will be impaired, and the treatments cause him to lose his hair and require the application of a particularly goopy ointment. This isn’t a cancer book built upon a foundation of prayer, hope, and life lessons. The driving force here is Ross’ justifiable anger. Ross is angry at the anonymous kids making hurtful memes about him and at Isaac for abandoning him when he needs a friend most. Ross funnels his feelings into learning how to play guitar, hoping to make a splash at the school’s talent show. The author balances this anger element well against the typical middle-grade tropes. Misunderstood bully? Check. Well-meaning parents? Check. While some of these elements will feel familiar, the novel’s emotional climax remains effectively earned. Characters are paper-white in Harrell’s accompanying cartoons. Not your typical kid-with-cancer book. (Fiction. 9-12)


My Comments

Deeply personal, painful, but balanced with humor. The middle school feelings of just 

wanting to fit in can resonate with any person going through traumatic illness. I wouldn't 

market this book as humor because the devastating experience of disfiguring and 

painful illness rings so true, but the humor gets you through as it also gets people 

through bad experiences in life.


Pair this with Wonder by Palacio, Out of My Mind by Draper, and other similar books.

Five stars. A favorite!




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