Thursday, July 17, 2008

Book Blurb: A Girl Named Zippy


A Girl Named Zippy: Growing Up Small in Mooreland, Indiana by Haven Kimmel. I read this a few years ago for book club, and loved it. It's a memoir, which I don't normally read, but it came highly recommended so I gave it a try. Unlike the heavier reading of books like Jane Eyre, this is a quick read and often laugh-out-loud funny. It's a great book! Once again, for the blurb I'm combining the best from Publishers Weekly and Library Journal:
It's a clich to say that a good memoir reads like a well-crafted work of fiction, but Kimmel's smooth, impeccably humorous prose evokes her childhood as vividly as any novel. Born in 1965, she grew up in Mooreland, Ind., a place that by some "mysterious and powerful mathematical principle" perpetually retains a population of 300, a place where there's no point learning the street names because it's just as easy to say, "We live at the four-way stop sign." Hers is less a formal autobiography than a collection of vignettes comprising the things a small child would remember: sick birds, a new bike, reading comics at the drugstore, the mean old lady down the street. The truths of childhood are rendered in lush yet simple prose; here's Zippy describing a friend who hates wearing girls' clothes: "Julie in a dress was like the rest of us in quicksand." Over and over, we encounter pearls of third-grade wisdom revealed in a child's assured voice: "There are a finite number of times one can safely climb the same tree in a single day"; or, regarding Jesus, "Everyone around me was flat-out in love with him, and who wouldn't be? He was good with animals, he loved his mother, and he wasn't afraid of blind people."
Nicknamed "Zippy" for her energetic interpretation of a circus monkey, she could not be bothered to speak until she was three years old, and her first words involved bargaining with her father about whether or not a baby bottle was still appropriate. Born in 1965, Zippy lived in a world filled with a loving family, peculiar neighbors, and multitudes of animals, including a chicken she loved and treated like a baby. Her story is filled with good humor, fine storytelling, and acute observations of small town life.

2 comments:

Deb said...

Sounds like a fun book. I've been thinking about reading it for a while now. I haven't seemed to be able to do much reading lately. Maybe it has something to do with having 3 children.

Jodi said...

I'm going to have to go find this one. It sounds really cute.

I LOVE your book blurbs! Now I've come to count on them for advice on what to read. What will I ever do if you stop posting books? I shudder to think...