The Opposite of Hallelujah
CCBC Review:
After joining a convent eight years earlier, Caro’s older sister Hannah has renounced her vows and returned home. To sixteen-year-old Caro, Hannah feels like a stranger, and she resents her sister’s intrusion into her comfortable life as an only child. Caro lies to her friends and new boyfriend to cover up Hannah’s return, rather than have to explain her presence. It’s not easy to have Hannah around. She’s withdrawn and clearly depressed—in fact, she’s severely anorexic, and her parents struggle with how to help their adult daughter. Caro finds support in the unlikely friendship of a priest who isn’t put off by her anti-religious opinions and who shares her love of science. A tragic accident during Hannah’s childhood, which her parents have been tiptoeing around for years and which still haunts Hannah, slowly comes to light. Caro, at first relentlessly rude to her sister, gradually develops empathy for Hannah’s physical and emotional state, and pushes her parents to face the reality of their daughter’s condition. Just the right amount of humor brightens this story of sisters reunited and a realistic family struggling to find the right path through a difficult time. ©2012 Cooperative Children's Book Center
CCBC Age Recommendation: Age 14 and older
Age Range:
Grades 9-12 (Age 14 and older)
Format:
Novel
Subjects:
Christian People
Eating Disorders
Faith, Spirituality and Religion
Families
Sisters
Trauma
Diversity subject:
Christian
Psychiatric Disability/Condition
On CCBC Booklist:
Religion in the Lives of Children and Teens
Publisher:
Delacorte
Publish Year: 2012
Pages: 452
ISBN: 9780385738361
CCBC Location: Fiction, Jarzab