The Double Life of Zoe Flynn
|
| Price: | $12.95 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details |
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com
27 new or used available from $4.95
Average customer review:Product Description
Zoe Flynn has a secret.
She used to live in California, in a big old house -- the best house in the world really -- at 18 Hawk Road. It rambled and creaked and was full of good hiding places. She used to have a best friend named Kellen who lived right down the road, and a dog named Merlin who loved to play with her. But now she lives in a little town in Oregon, and everything has changed.
Now, Zoe has to be careful. Careful that she doesn't tell anyone, not her friends or her teacher or especially that cop who's been watching her, that she doesn't live at 18 Hawk Road anymore. That now her family lives in an old green van that's cramped and dirty and doesn't even work all the time. Zoe's always hoping that someday she'll find her way back home....
Lyrically written by Janet Lee Carey, The Double Life of Zoe Flynn is a moving novel about hope, family, friendship, and the true definition of a home.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #1412567 in Books
- Published on: 2007-10-29
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 240 pages
Editorial Reviews
From School Library Journal
Grade 5-7–At the end of fifth grade, Zoe's parents announce that they will have to pack up the van and leave their small California town so that Dad can look for work. He finally finds a teaching job in Oregon, but they haven't saved enough money for rent, so they're still living in the van when school starts. Zoe is mortified and desperate to keep anyone from suspecting their plight, but it's hard to keep up a good front. She struggles to maintain a friendship with Aliya, who soon wonders why she is never invited to Zoe's house and even intimates that anti-Muslim bigotry might be the reason. Magical thinking–that she can win enough money to buy a house, that the glass doorknob she's pilfered from her old home will someday open the door to a new "dreamroom"–keeps Zoe from utter despair. After she saves enough money from doing odd jobs, she takes the bus back home and discovers that nothing there is the same. A near-tragic event leads to a reunion with her family. By book's end, Zoe has come to terms with living in a mobile trailer park and has reconciled with Aliya. The struggles of this middle-class family to keep their heads above water are realistically and sympathetically presented. As a topic for discussion or a comfort to those in similar situations, Carey's book should be widely appreciated.–Miriam Lang Budin, Chappaqua Public Library, NY
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From Booklist
Gr. 4-6. When Zoe's dad loses his teaching job and his bookstore, the family is forced to leave her beloved small California town. After two months of camping out on the road, Zoe starts sixth grade in a new town, 500 miles away from "home." Times are hard. Dad gets part-time work; Mom cleans houses; and the family lives out of sight in a cramped old van. Zoe keeps her homelessness a secret at school, and nearly loses her only friend, Aliyah, a Muslim girl, who misunderstands why she's never invited to Zoe's home. Zoe is too articulate about her odyssey, and there's almost too much plot--Zoe not only yearns for her old home but actually takes a bus back--and saves the old house from a fire. But there's plenty of drama in the hardship of the middle-class kid suddenly poor and wrenched from home, in the pain of her loss, and in her daily struggle for shelter and a room of her own. Hazel Rochman
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
About the Author
Janet Lee Carey grew up in Mill Valley, California, in a house very much like the one in this book. And like Zoe's house, it was surrounded by ancient redwoods that whispered in the night. In the morning, sunlight cut through ocean mist and fingered through the trees. It was in this magic place that Janet first dreamed of writing children's books.
In addition to this book, Janet is also the author of Wenny Has Wings and Molly's Fire. A teacher, she lives with her family near Phantom Lake in Washington.
Customer Reviews
Homeless Story is Rich In Writing and Emotion
Zoe Flynn has a secret. She and her family are homeless, living in the family van since her father lost his bookstore and his job. Zoe is successful at keeping her family's plight a secret from her new friend Aliya, police officer Bergstrom and everyone else in Scout River, Oregon, where her father finally finds work. But Zoe misses her big old house in California with its creaky floors, leaky toilet and her own closet hide-away. After a desperate attempt to go back and regain her home fails, Zoe finally discovers that the elusive "door" her grandmother advised her to find is not in her old house but right in the backyard of the trailer she and her family move into. By opening this new door, Zoe opens up her life once again to the joys of friendship, family and her own artistic spririt. Janet Lee Carey's story is well crafted and her writing lyrical. Zoe's character is alive with all the dreams, fears, and yearnings of a young girl struggling to understand and overcome such a dismal situation. This contemporary story of homelessness is ageless in its expression of the love of a place called home.
A Story for Everyone Who Longs for Home
Zoe feels helpless when her parents announce they must move. Everything Zoe has ever loved is left behind, friends, her town, the redwoods, her secret room. She vows, no matter what, she'll return. Thus begins the tale of a brave young girls as she faces the prospect of being homeless, a new friend who she can't trust with the truth, and a family she loves, but who don't seem to understand how she feels. As things whirl out of control, Zoe decides to do something drastic, something daring, something that will rock everyone's life and change things forever.
Carey is a master wordsmith. She has created an imperfect character that I fell in love with immediately. The ending gave me chills as the threads that had been woven so materfully throughout the story came together in a satisfying way.
If you haven't read one of Carey's other books, then you are missing a rare treat.
Amazing!
This is a lovely novel about a feisty eleven year old whose family loses their home and moves to Oregon from California, where they live in a van while Zoe goes to school, and tries very hard to keep her friends from finding out this fact.
The premise is touching, heart-breaking at times, but perhaps the best part of the novel is the lyricism of Carey's voice, her sensitivity to a 11 year old's hopes and fears, her use of language, her attention to tension and resolution.



