Worse things by Sally Murphy
Illus. by Sarah Davis. Walker Books, 2020. ISBN: 9781760651657.
(Age: 9+) Highly recommended. Three stories evolve in this heart
thrilling book told in short snappy page long verses, wrapping the
reader easily into its rhythm. Blake the football player, bent on a
long career in the game he loves, is first and the opening line
'Crack', brings us abruptly to the pain of his broken arm, and
moreover the realisation that he is out of the team for a long time.
Jolene comes next. A hockey player with a pushy mum wanting the girl
to pursue the career she always wanted. And finally refugee Amed, at
a loss in his new school, friendless and with only his aunt to live
with after his family were all killed, he landing in a refugee camp.
The trio of kids about to go to high school each has problems with
isolation. Blake is isolated from his friends through his injury,
realising that his life is football; Jolene has come to understand
that her hockey team does not like her, she feels isolated from her
pushy mum, her father works overseas and her mother is threatening
to send her to boarding school a long way from the town of Cowan
while Amed is isolated through his lack of English and it is because
a teacher suggests Jolene have conversations with Amed to improve
his English,that change occurs in all their lives. There are some
heart warming sequences in this story which will melt hearts and
help readers see the threads which bind us all.
Amed has lost all his family to war, but in realising that his aunt
is now his family, has a photo of the two of them framed and placed
next to the only photo he has of his dead family. His aunt gives him
a soccer ball and he is able to tell Blake about it initiating Blake
to show him that others in the town play soccer, but the pitch is
almost hidden behind the sports field. And Jolene finally tells her
mother that she does not want to play hockey, but when disaster
strikes, it is hockey and the girls she thought didn't care, that
enfolds her.
This is a wonderful story of finding your place, of belonging, of
working out who your friends are, of reaching out.
Readers who love Sally Murphy's work (remember Pearl
verses the world, Toppling
and Roses
are blue) will eagerly pick this up. Others, like me,
looking past the cover that seems to offer a fantasy story, will on
opening the book, and reading the first page be convinced that this
is a story well worth reading. Teacher
notes are available. Themes: Football, Soccer, Hockey,
Friendship, Verse novel, Family.
Fran Knight