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Cage of Stars

Cage of Stars
By Jacquelyn Mitchard

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Product Description

12-year-old Veronica Swan's idyllic life in a close-knit Mormon community is shattered when her two younger sisters are brutally murdered. Although her parents find the strength to forgive the deranged killer, Scott Early, Veronica cannot do the same. Years later, she sets out alone to avenge her sisters' deaths, dropping her identity and severing ties in the process. As she closes in on Early, Veronica will discover the true meaning of sin and compassion, before she makes a decision that will change her and her family's lives forever.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #69152 in Books
  • Published on: 2007-08-29
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 336 pages

Features


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
A young Mormon girl finds herself torn between retribution and forgiveness in The Deep End of the Ocean author Mitchard's latest. Twelve-year-old Veronica "Ronnie" Swan witnesses the murder of her two sisters in her family's yard in tiny Cedar City, Utah. Murderer Scott Early is immediately apprehended, but is diagnosed with schizophrenia and ends up spending just three years in a state mental hospital. The rest of Ronnie's family turns to their faith to forgive Early, visiting him just before his release after a battery of drugs have restored him to normalcy. But Ronnie remains angry and haunted by her inability to save her sisters from him, and as she comes of age she tracks Early to San Diego, becomes an EMT, talks his wife into hiring her as a nanny for their infant daughter, and starts planning her vengeance. But as Early's life comes into focus, Ronnie's plan leads to an unexpected, if overly summative, climax. Ronnie progresses from a stock girl-next-door type to a young woman with considerable emotional depth, and Mitchard understatedly portrays her attempts to navigate romance and other interactions as a Mormon raised very "of the Church." The results are sweet and solid. (May 1)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From The Washington Post
Several years ago I heard an editor make this seemingly incomprehensible remark: "Don't bother with prologues. Nobody reads them." My author's mind reeled. How can you skip a prologue? It wouldn't exist in the finished text if it were not important, if it were not the correct place to begin.

Enter Jacquelyn Mitchard's Cage of Stars, a novel by the author of The Deep End of the Ocean that begs to be read from Chapter One. From that point on, the story is nearly flawless. This is not to suggest that her prologue isn't a strong beginning. But it's a strong beginning for the wrong novel. This story does not -- and should not -- proceed as promised. "You can start a story anywhere you want," Mitchard's narrator observes. I suggest that this freedom applies to the reader as well.

Veronica "Ronnie" Swan launches Chapter One with this strong, simple sentence: "At the moment when Scott Early killed Becky and Ruthie, I was hiding in the shed."

She wasn't hiding in fear. Already a trusted and capable baby-sitter at age 12, she was playing hide and seek with her much younger sisters. Her parents had left her in charge. "Where we lived," she says of her Mormon family, "wasn't even really a town. It was a sort of settlement, for people like my father, who always said he liked his 'elbow room.' " She thought her sisters were outside counting to 50, or to 100, and when they didn't call out, she assumed they'd gotten confused and started over. It was their silence, not any sense of horror, that caused her to open the door of the shed.

"And I saw my sisters," Ronnie says, "lying there like little white dolls in great dark pools of paint. I saw Scott Early, a young man with short blond hair, sitting on the picnic table, wearing only his boxers and a dirty T-shirt, sobbing as if they were his little sisters, as if a terrible monster had come along and done this."

Mitchard's prose shines though the simple voice of a child. In Ronnie's narrative hands, the reader can almost touch the sisters. "[Becky's] teeth were purple from the berries she'd eaten for breakfast," she says. "Becky was as thin and fast as a minnow in a creek and seemed to live practically on air. Ruthie was as round and 'slalom' as a little koala bear. Her favorite thing was to eat cookie dough right from the bowl." Even as Ronnie brings them alive for us, she cautions us not to assume ownership. They were her sisters and nobody else's. She earns a strange reputation in the media for screaming at the crowds who stand in front of their house, holding candles and singing "Amazing Grace." "Ruthie and Becky were ours, and why did other people get to feel good about themselves, singing and crying over my sisters they never knew?"

Early portions of the story deal almost exclusively with survivor's guilt and the grief of unbearable loss. This is much-trodden territory, but the author keeps it fresh simply by rendering every beat, every ordinary moment in the aftermath of the tragedy with the clear bell tone of human truth.

Mitchard then delivers another emotional and moral twist: a decision by the parents -- several years later -- to forgive Scott Early. Sounds hard to imagine, but their reasoning feels essentially sound, and Early is, arguably, a forgivable killer. A gentle (albeit severely mentally ill) young man who would never harm a soul while on his medication, he finds his life shattered by guilt over the murders, which he cannot remember. Trouble is, he's released only four years later. This hardly repays his debt, and one can't fail to dread the potential consequences. His wife stays with him against the odds and quickly becomes pregnant with their first child. In this framework, a premise that could have been disappointingly simplistic is anything but. It's a setup with no easy answers.

Ronnie cannot and will not forgive. She moves to San Diego at an early age and studies to become an emergency medical technician, all in the context of stalking the Early family. Soon she is a trusted nanny to Juliet, the beautiful baby girl of the killer and his wife, and the suspense of watching her plans unfold makes the book nearly impossible to set down.

Cage of Stars has everything good fiction needs: ably crafted characters, a taut sense of suspense and a lot to say about a world of tough emotional choices. If the dialogue often makes everyone seem too bald and forthcoming in articulating his or her emotional landscape, this is fairly easily overlooked.

The ending is far more believable and satisfying than the ending we were duped into anticipating by the troublesome prologue. At best, the sleight of hand is an unnecessary device. At worst, it is a breach of trust that mars an otherwise satisfying reading experience. But Cage of Stars is a worthwhile and compelling read, a novel that has all the elements of good storytelling and needs only to believe that this is enough.

Reviewed by Catherine Ryan Hyde
Copyright 2006, The Washington Post. All Rights Reserved.

From Booklist
Family catastrophes are Mitchard's stock-in-trade, and the latest novel from the best-selling, Oprah-anointed author of The Deep End of the Ocean (1996) is no exception. The Swans are a deeply religious Mormon family living in a remote area of Utah. Twelve-year-old Veronica, "as responsible as any mother," often baby-sits her sweet little sisters while her mother works in her art studio and her father teaches English at the local high school. Engaged in a game of hide-and-seek one afternoon, Veronica emerges from the garden shed where she had been hiding to discover the dead bodies of her sisters, killed within moments of each other by a young man suffering from schizophrenia. Over the next four years, Veronica's parents operate in a haze of grief and confusion; they only start to heal when they make the momentous decision to forgive their daughters' killer, a decision that sends Veronica into an emotional tailspin. She hatches an ill-fated plan to track down the murderer who had "drenched our lives in blood." There is some calculated emotional manipulation here, and some of the characters are overly idealized. Nevertheless, Mitchard tells a compelling, even suspenseful, story; skillfully crafts an authentic narrative voice, and succeeds in humanizing the adherents of a religion that still suffers from widespread negative stereotypes. Joanne Wilkinson
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved


Customer Reviews

A traumatic emotional struggle 5
Veronica Swan's two little sisters are murdered while she is babysitting them. Her life and her parents are turned upside-down as they try to deal with their grief while facing the media. Ronnie's parents struggle with their grief for two years but slowly seek to forgive Scott Early. Ronnie does not understand their decision which forces her to move out. She decides to go to California. It is no coincidence that Scott and his wife are now living there. Ronnie pursues her dream of becoming an EMT. She manages to get a job babysitting for Juliet, Scott and Kelly's baby daughter. Ronnie deftly manages to stay connected to her friends from home and make new ones on the job. The case is one that will stay with you for a long time after finishing the last page. Bravo for such a great masterpiece!

Could not put this book down5
I wouldn't want to be Ronnie Swan, and yet her story mesmerized me, as did Jacquelyn Mitchard's ability to spin this emotional tale around the kind of family catastrophe parents fear most. As Ronnie moved forward through her life, I kept asking myself, What would you do? I'm still not sure. But when I finished reading her story, it was with great sadness that we had to say good-bye.

The Babysitters Club Meets Charles Manson1
Without the heinous crime this little novel very well could have been shelved as a young adult title...Ronnie is rtdiculously unrealistic...Scott Early(the grim reaper)very thinly sketched...basketball play by play...cutsie instant messaging...first kisses...not to mention painfully unrealistic college admissions...Yale? Harvard? EMT training at 16? I lost all patience with this by the syrupy ending.More than disappointed.