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Review: Joshua Whitehead’s Jonny Appleseed is a milestone novel about love, in all its messy forms
This article was published more than 6 years ago. Some information may no longer be current.
- Jonny Appleseed
- By Joshua Whitehead
- Arsenal Pulp Press
Every so often, a book comes along that feels like a milestone, with revolution nestled beneath every sentence, every word. Oji-Cree/nehiyaw two-spirit/Indigiqueer writer Joshua Whitehead’s Jonny Appleseed is one of those books. Of course, anyone who has read Whitehead’s futuristic, cyberpunk, poetic masterpiece full-metal indigiqueer , released earlier this year, won’t be surprised at this statement.
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On paper, Jonny Appleseed is about a young two-spirit/Indigiqueer NDN glitter princess named Jonny trying to get back to the rez from the big city in time for his stepfather’s funeral. Jonny had a difficult relationship with his stepfather, Roger. He not only made Jonny feel bad for being queer, but also “called me an apple when I told him I wanted to leave the rez. ‘You’re red on the outside,’ he said, ‘and white on the inside.’” Still, Jonny knows that without Roger, his “Momma’s got the sick of loneliness, the kind that’ll turn your liver into coal” and he loves his mother, so he decides to go back so he can support her.
Love, in all its forms, permeates this novel. Complicated love, messy love, nourishing love, platonic love, sexual love, familial love, secret love. Every character in this book is portrayed with empathy and understanding – from Jonny’s Momma, to his kokum (or grandmother), to his best friend/lover Tias, to Tias’s girlfriend (and, eventually, Jonny’s good friend) Jordan. All of them are complicated, dealing with their own traumas in various ways, but they’re never only their traumas, which is important. Each character has hopes, dreams, vulnerabilities, regrets. Each one laughs and jokes. In other words, they feel like real people. Long after I finished the book, I found myself missing these characters. That isn’t something that happens often.
Whitehead doesn’t just write about love of people, but also places. When Jonny talks about the decision to leave his rez, it’s clear that he feels conflicted. “Leaving hurts,” Jonny says. “It’s not glamorous like Julia Roberts makes it seem.” What’s particularly beautiful is the way that Whitehead writes about the rez, the way it’s imbued with such care and open-eyed clarity: “Even in the 21st century, two brown boys can’t fall in love on the rez.… But it’s home because the bannock is still browning in the oven and your kokum is still making tea and eating Arrowroot biscuits. It’s home because it has to be – routine satiates these pangs.”
Perhaps the most refreshing part of this book is the frankness with which Whitehead writes about sex – particularly queer sex. As soon as the book opens, he lets readers know what they’re in for: “I figured out I was gay when I was eight. I liked to stay up late after everyone went to bed and watch Queer as Folk on my kokum’s TV. She had a satellite and all the channels, pirated of course.”
Joshua Whitehead. (Joshua Whitehead)
From there, Jonny tells us about his first hookup with a white guy, his catfishing of Tias, who he originally told that he was a girl named Lucia, his gradual relationship with Tias and all the drunken hookups and hustles in between. As an Indigenous sex worker, Jonny often has to deal with what he calls “treaty chasers,” or men “who only want me to play NDN.” These men never recognize that what they’re asking Jonny to enact is a fantasy. One even complains when Jonny dresses up as Catwoman, saying he wanted Jonny to dress up as “himself,” which he interpreted as “the fringe and [stuff].” The arrogance of assuming that this stereotypical image of an Indian is in any way grounded in reality, particularly the reality of a stranger, is one that Indigenous readers will know well. It’s particularly good to see Whitehead acknowledge how racist stereotypes work within the setting of sexual fantasy, as so many racist stereotypes are ingrained in modern-day sex and pornography, even in queer communities.
Jonny’s relationship with Tias in many ways drives the book. Both assure one another they’re not gay – a proclamation that Tias in particular has to make, as his adoptive father is violently heterosexual and toxically masculine, punishing Tias for any deviations from the “manly” norm. Still, his love for and attraction to Jonny can’t be denied. After Jonny tells Tias about a traumatizing night of drinking and violence that left him hospitalized, Tias leads him to his bedroom, lays a cold washcloth on his head and holds him, telling him everything will be okay. This is what I think of when I think of decolonial love, which Leanne Betasamosake Simpson wrote of in her book Islands of Decolonial Love : love that sees your trauma and carries you through it. As Jonny says, “Funny how an NDN ‘love you’ sounds more like, ‘I’m in pain with you.’”
Despite its often serious subject matter, Jonny Appleseed is a very funny book, in the same way that Indigenous people themselves are often very funny despite our traumas. In that way, reading this book felt to me like home. Every line felt like being back on Six Nations, laughing with my family, even though I was in my apartment in Brantford. With its fluid structure and timelines, Jonny Appleseed creates a dream-like reading experience – and with a narrator as wise, funny and loveable as Jonny, it’s the sort of dream you don’t want to wake up from.
“I am my own best medicine,” Jonny says. He’s ours, too.
Alicia Elliott is a Tuscarora writer from Six Nations, currently living in Brantford, Ont., and author of the forthcoming book A Mind Spread Out on the Ground.
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Jonny Appleseed
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46 pages • 1 hour read
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Chapters 1-8
Chapters 9-19
Chapters 20-31
Chapters 32-39
Chapters 40-54
Character Analysis
Symbols & Motifs
Important Quotes
Essay Topics
Summary and Study Guide
The novel Jonny Appleseed by Joshua Whitehead was originally published in 2018 by Arsenal Pulp Press. Whitehead, a queer Indigenous writer from Peguis Frist Nation, uses the auto-fictional character of Jonny to explore the intersections of LGBTQ+ and Indigenous identity. The novel was a 2021 Canada Reads Winner and the winner of a Lambda Literary Award. It was also a Globe and Mail Best Book of the Year and longlisted for the Scotiabank Giller Prize.
This guide uses the 2018 ePub edition from Arsenal Pulp Press.
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Content Warning: Several chapters in the book reference childhood physical abuse, explicit sexual acts, and one chapter references childhood sexual assault. These chapters are noted beneath the individual chapter headings.
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The novel follows the first-person narrator, Jonny, as he figures out whether he can make enough money from webcamming (or “camming,” broadcasting oneself over the Internet) to make it home to the reserve for his stepfather’s funeral. For camming, he uses Snapchat to put on individual shows for clients. Most often requested is Jonny dressing up like an Indigenous stereotype , in full regalia, and masturbating on camera. He seems to accept this wryly, knowing that it's part of how white Canadians fetishize him. Jonny identifies as Two-Spirit—a non-binary gender identity that is specific to Indigenous cultures. He has romantic and sexual relationships only with men, and especially with his childhood friend, Tias .
The narrative structure moves back and forth between the present day and stories in Jonny’s past. The anecdotes from the past largely focus on Jonny’s grandmother, his kokum , who played a significant role in both raising him and in teaching him how to be the person he is. His kokum accepted him for who he was, and they enjoyed exploring femininity together. His mother also accepted him, but she was harder on him. She tried to teach him not to let anyone else take anything from him for free, and that having bad experiences with alcohol was part of what it meant to grow up Indigenous. His mother was largely absent during his childhood due to her substance abuse, especially alcohol.
The childhood chapters about Tias illuminate the history of his relationship with Jonny. Tias’s adoptive father physically abused him anytime he expressed signs of femininity; as an adult, Tias refuses to consider himself gay despite regularly having sex with Jonny. He does not tell anyone else about his relationship with Jonny, although many of the other characters in the novel seem to be aware of it anyway. His girlfriend, Jordan , senses something is wrong—she physically assaults Jonny for sending sexually charged text messages to Tias. The kids on the reservation, where all three of them grow up, assault and demean Jonny. Sometimes Tias is forced to join in, though Jonny doesn’t blame him for it. Jonny and Tias tell each other that they love one another.
As an adult, Tias struggles to transition to life away from the reservation. He and Jonny continue their on-again off-again relationship, which only comes to a significant pause when Tias gets Jordan pregnant. They decide to keep the pregnancy though the novel ends before the child’s birth.
Over the course of the novel, the characters all struggle with the transition to adulthood. It’s hard to imagine a future on the reservation, but it’s equally hard for them to make their way in the world beyond it. In Winnipeg, Manitoba, Jonny is discriminated against as an Indigenous person—shooed away from a convenience store as an assumed vagrant, threatened by his own neighbor as an assumed thief. Despite the difficulties, he doesn’t let life in the city discourage him. He enjoys the ability to visit queer-dominant spaces, which he was not able to access on the reservation. He still struggles with being Indigenous and queer; when other members of the LGBTQ+ community ask him where he’s from, he rarely shares that he’s Indigenous for fear of being fetishized or tokenized.
Jonny makes enough money to get a ride back to the reservation from an Indigenous woman who acts as an unofficial cab driver and who resells stolen goods to make ends meet. Though he ends up missing his stepfather's wake, he makes it back home in time for the funeral. He realizes that he doesn’t particularly care about his stepfather’s death for his own sake, but for the sake of his mother. Though he and his mother are still often at odds, they figure out a way to make peace with each other and move forward with a loving adult relationship.
At the end of the novel, Jonny realizes that the reservation is home, and that it feels like home to him. He’s only been away in Winnipeg for a couple of years, but the distance has helped him realize and deepen his sense of belonging to the reservation. The novel ends on this note of realization, and on Jonny’s resolve to move forward as an Indigenous Two-Spirit person.
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Jonny Appleseed by Joshua Whitehead: Book Review
“You’re gonna need a rock and a whole lotta medicine,” is a quote from Jonny Appleseed , and is the theme of this book.
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Jonny Appleseed was written by Joshua Whitehead and was published in 2018. Since then, it has been nominated for the CBC Canada Reads 2021 and was awarded the Lambda Literary Award for Gay Fiction in 2019.
We follow Jonny Appleseed over a brief period of time as they try to raise the money to return home for a funeral. Jonny is a Two-Spirit/Indigiqueer person who lives in Winnipeg, Manitoba.
It is wonderful to read a book that includes an Indigenous person who is a member of the LGBTQ2A+ community. What makes it even better, is the author is also a part of the community. That helps add to the realism of the characters and situations in the book.
The book paints a realistic look at the lives of the Indigenous people both on and off the “rez.”
Jonny is a sex worker, and there are many descriptions of the encounters.
The book was written mostly in a narrative style, with minimal dialogue.
Many scenes containing excessive details about dreams, thoughts, and sexual encounters.
Overall, I am still unsure what I think about Jonny Appleseed . Did I enjoy it? Some parts I found educational and enjoyable. Others were a bit too descriptive for my taste. Jonny seems to have a lot of affection for his kokum (grandmother), as she was there for him most of his life, helping him pick himself up. Jonny also seems to have a love/hate relationship with his mother, and at times seems to be more of a parent than she is.
As I am trying to broaden my reading horizons, this book is a great step in that direction. It feels as though there are many parts of this book that are more autobiographical than fictional. And that’s ok, but maybe it should be marketed as such.
My biggest issue with the book (other than the excessive details about the sexual encounters), is the fact it was written in a narrative style. It isn’t a style of writing that I enjoy reading.
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Jonny Appleseed by Joshua Whitehead
Jonny appleseed by joshua whitehead won canada reads 2021, when it was championed by devery jacobs.
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Jonny Appleseed by Joshua Whitehead won Canada Reads 2021, when it was championed by Devery Jacobs .
About Jonny Appleseed
"You're gonna need a rock and a whole lotta medicine" is a mantra that Jonny Appleseed, a young two-spirit/Indigiqueer, repeats to himself in this vivid and utterly compelling novel. Off the reserve and trying to find ways to live and love in the big city, Jonny becomes a cybersex worker who fetishizes himself in order to make a living. Self-ordained as an NDN glitter princess, Jonny has one week before he must return to the "rez," and his former life, to attend the funeral of his stepfather. The next seven days are like a fevered dream: stories of love, trauma, sex, kinship, ambition and the heartbreaking recollection of his beloved kokum. Jonny's world is a series of breakages, appendages and linkages — and as he goes through the motions of preparing to return home, he learns how to put together the pieces of his life.
Jonny Appleseed is a unique, shattering vision of Indigenous life, full of grit, glitter and dreams. ( From Arsenal Pulp Press )
Jonny Appleseed was on the longlist for the 2018 Scotiabank Giller Prize and was shortlisted for the Governor General's Literary Award for fiction and the Amazon Canada First Novel Award . It also won the Lambda Literary Award for gay fiction .
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Why Joshua Whitehead wrote Jonny Appleseed
"Jonny is a character that's been with me since I was 17 or 18. He's this little kid obsessed with the beatniks and problem novels like Go Ask Alice. He came from poems that I excised from full-metal indigiqueer . When I took those little poems and planted them into this new idea for a story, Jonny took the stage and was like, 'Here I am — write me into the world.'
Jonny is the better parts of me, hyperbolized. From that came this shiny, glittered figure of light for myself. - Joshua Whitehead
"A lot of people are reading him as this hyper-confident, super-suave swindling character. But I had to craft a two-spirit character who has pain, but who is triumphant in that pain, shifting it into love. Jonny is the better parts of me, hyperbolized. From that came this shiny, glittered figure of light for myself."
Read more in his interview with The Next Chapter .
Watch the Canada Reads trailer for Jonny Appleseed by Joshua Whitehead
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Canada Reads 2021: Jonny Appleseed by Joshua Whitehead
Interviews with joshua whitehead.
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Devery Jacobs on the beauty and hope in Jonny Appleseed
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From the book
I figured that I was gay when I was eight. I stayed up late after everyone went to bed and watched Queer as Folk on my kokum's TV. She had a satellite and all the channels, pirated of course. At the time, my mom and I were living with my kokum because my dad had left us thinking he was Dolly Parton or Garth Brooks or something. Queer as Folk aired at midnight on Showcase; I muted the channel, added subtitles, and watched as four gay men lived their lives in Pittsburgh. I wanted to be like them, I wanted to have lofts and go to gay bars and dance with cute boys and blow and get blown in a Philly gloryhole. I wanted to work in comic shops and universities, be sexy and rich. I wanted that.
From Jonny Appleseed by Joshua Whitehead ©2018. Published by Arsenal Pulp Press.
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Roger's Reads
Author & Book Reviewer
Review of Jonny Appleseed by Joshua Whitehead
June 22, 2018 by Roger Hyttinen Leave a Comment
This story follows a witty, young Native American man named Jonny Appleseed, member of the Peguis First Nation, who has left the reservation to live in the big city of Winnipeg. There, Jonny reinvents himself and runs his own business as a cybersex worker, in which he fetishizes himself via webcam to earn a living. As the story begins, Jonny has just received the news that his Stepfather Roger has passed away and he has only seven days to earn enough cash to return to the Rez for the funeral.
What follows is a brief, non-linear peak into Jonny’s life as he recalls memories of his strong, no-nonsense Kokum (his Grandmother), his mother, his homophobic stepfather, and his relationship with Tias. During the novel, we flash back and forth from Jonny’s life back on the Reservation to the present where he is working as a sex worker and maintaining his romantic yet complicated relationship with Tias, with whom he’s been friends/lovers with since childhood.
Through Jonny’s first-person narrative, we explore such issues as racism, anti-gay violence, friendship, love, loss, Native American identity, trauma, the challenges of being “Indigiqueer” (identifying as both Indigenous and queer), sexual awakening and most of all, survival.
In this way, the story is sometimes a bit harrowing and cringeworthy, while other times tender, funny and beautiful. This is a real, relevant, and eye-opening book — an intense yet beautiful story written for voices that need to be heard. Jonny Appleseed is a sincere, honest story about a person’s growth despite sometimes seemingly suffocating racism and homophobia.
I especially enjoyed the intimate passages where Jonny reflects upon his life with Tias — how they met, how they became lovers and friends, and the somewhat strange relationship they maintain in the present day. There was also plenty of laugh-out-loud humor in this story, especially revolving around Jonny and his Kokum.
Overall, I found Jonny Appleseed to be a refreshing, brilliant work that’s gorgeously expressive and poetic yet with a certain rawness to it that makes it real and relatable for the reader. I felt that the author does a superb job taking us back into the mind of our two-spirit protagonist. I also liked how the story came together in the end, with everything wrapping up nicely during the last few pages. Overall, an impactful, diverse and important book from a great author. Recommended!
Warning: Given that our protagonist earns a living as a sex worker, there are quite a few graphic descriptions of sexual situations and profanity — so more sensitive readers be warned.
You can check out Jonny Appleseed here at Amazon or at The Book Depository
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Book review: Jonny Appleseed by Joshua Whitehead
Jonny Appleseed is heading back to the Peguis First Nations community where he was born, just outside of Winnipeg, because his stepfather passed away. Such is the premise of this short, punchy first novel by author Joshua Whitehead. In this book, Jonny's character wanders through thoughts and memories, feelings of pain and joy as he attempts to gather enough money to go back to the reserve to see his mother.
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While hustling through cybersex gigs to get money for his trip, Johnny will introduce the cast of characters that make up his life. Jonny’s Two-Spirit Indigiqueer identity is a large part of the construction of his character: his relation to his grandma (Kokum), his mother, and others around him often highlights their acceptance, or denial, of his identity. He grows to be an attaching character: tough as nails and yet vulnerable, at times. He resists to pain with love, and lives life with unmatched fervour even when it is not easy.
The book is set both in the present and in various times in Johnny’s memories. Of main importance is Tias, Jonny’s childhood friend and love of his life. They have gone through thick and thin, struggled through school fights and tense family situations as two boys growing up on the “rez”. Their stories are closely linked, and they will both keep and implicit and explicit love for each other throughout the book.
His depiction of both the reserve and Winnipeg breathes life into the realities of a community far often left out of Canadian literature. The writing in this book is technical, full of depth and consistency. As described by the publisher, this book portrays a universe full of “grit and glitter”, and well worth the read.
Joshua Whitehead is part of the new crop of Indigenous authors who we can only hope will write more, and for many years to come. Read Jonny Appleseed while we wait for more great publications from this young writer.
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What we're reading, april 12-18.
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A retelling of the famous Johnny Appleseed myth; a devastating memoir about the birth of the organic farming movement and its effect on a homesteading family; an attempt to discover the secrets of Little House on the Prairie ; and an NPR contributor's struggle with the recession and its economic aftermath.
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Johnny Appleseed
The man, the myth, the american story.
by Howard Means
At Easter time, Peter Cottontail comes hopping into our mind's eye — helped out by an eponymous song that's easy for kids to learn. And when the apple trees open their blossoms, we may have a thought for Johnny Appleseed, wandering the frontier with a sack on his shoulder and a tin pot on his head. But he's real, right? I've known the name John Chapman, and realizing that's about the extent of my knowledge, welcomed the chance to read a fresh biography. Chapman left the actual world in March 1845, dying of "winter plague" in a cabin near Fort Wayne, Ind., where he had asked for shelter and food, having walked 15 miles in cold, wet weather. His mythical status as Johnny Appleseed was already lofty: a smiling man — a vegetarian — who shared the forest with the Indians and bears and cougars, and brought his gift of apples to an expanding new America.
I'm impressed by the genealogical research that Howard Means offers, but these were pages I could easily have skipped. And I also failed to appreciate details of Chapman's devotion to the Church of the New Jerusalem and the teachings of Swedish philosopher and mystic Emanuel Swedenborg. It was the wandering Johnny Appleseed that rescued the book for me — Chapman leaving his Massachusetts home for scarce-settled Pennsylvania river lands, and then Ohio and finally Indiana. He wanted to stay on the moving, far western edge of the country, planting seedling orchards along the way. The apple trees would help the pioneer families stake out their settlements and be treasured for their flowering in the spring, fruit in the fall, hard cider come winter. And surely Chapman was a fascination at hearthsides, with his gospel-tinged backwoods storytelling, even though Means concludes: 'By our modern definitions, John Chapman almost certainly was insane.' -- Noah Adams, senior correspondent
Hardcover, 336 pages; Simon & Schuster; list price, $26; publication date, April 12
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This Life Is In Your Hands
One dream, sixty acres, and a family undone.
By Melissa Coleman
Eliot Coleman was one of the stars of the "back to the earth" movement of the late '60s and early '70s, after he moved to the rural coast of Maine with his young wife to start living off the land. Eliot and Sue (known in this book as Papa and Mama) were homesteaders — no running water, no electricity and a small one-room farmhouse where they made all of their vegetarian meals, raised directly from their own land. The Colemans' first daughter, Melissa, has now grown up, and she tells her version of remote farm life in This Life is In Your Hands . The book chronicles the more luscious aspects of homesteading — the basketball-sized squash, the ripe strawberries, the cool wind off the ocean — but Coleman also divulges the darker secrets of her family and tracks her parents' ultimate undoing (involving a tragedy that we won't reveal here). This is a story of paradise lost; of why the earth both gives and takes away.
I am not usually a fan of memoir, or at least not when the person involved hasn't won an Oscar or a Nobel Prize. But I decided to take the leap inside the pages of This Life Is In Your Hands, and I'm glad I did it, because it is a rare breed of book — a memoir that justifies its own existence; that feels like it needs to exist. What Coleman does so well here is break down a deeply seated myth about giving up the luxuries of city life and returning to the land: that this is the path to paradise (hard work, yes, but idyllic and pure). Coleman suggests that there is an immense amount of beauty to be found in the rural life, but that there are also emotional wells that cannot be filled with the austere farming experience, one that relies more on the intellect than emotion. In the end, the organic farming movement of the 1970s was as much about science and physical experimentation as it was about passion, and Coleman shows that without the essential ingredient of heart, any family — no matter how perfect and revolutionary it seems — is in danger of experiencing real loss. — Rachel Syme, books editor
Hardcover, 336 pages; Harper; list price, $25.99; publication date, April 12
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Children's books, 'little house on the prairie's' wilder women, the wilder life, my adventures in the lost world of little house on the prairie.
By Wendy McClure
Wendy McClure is an unsentimental writer, but she loves the Little House On The Prairie books. No, she really loves them. She loves them so much that she bought a butter churn on eBay. And she churned butter — you know, just to see. She took off on a trip with her heroically game boyfriend (who's charming in part because he doesn't insist on making a point of how heroically game he is), and they visited historic places where Laura Ingalls Wilder lived, and museums and pageants and kitschy stores where she's still beloved. The Wilder Life is a book of stories about these adventures, and unlike a lot of similarly structured books in which writers appear to be doing unusual things just to write books about them, McClure essentially uses the opportunity to write a series of thoughtful essays about memory at different levels. There's the tiny, very specific theme of her particular childhood love of the Little House books, but as she immerses herself in those memories, it pulls back to become a book about the way all of us relate to stories we hear as children, and about the way nostalgia operates unpredictably and sometimes painfully, and ultimately even about our false cultural memories of a romantic pioneer past that only sort of happened.
I've read Wendy McClure's writing for a long time, and what I always like about it is that it's warm but also sharp and funny. It's deeply human without being maudlin, even when she's writing about subjects like the death of her mother and what it may have to do with her exploration of this very dear childhood memory. Some of the stories she tells are sweet, like having tea at a farmhouse staffed by perhaps the only person who loves Little House as much as she does. Some are darkly hilarious, like a 'homesteading' weekend that turns out to have considerably more to do with the apocalypse than she was expecting. There is, unavoidably, some tonal inconsistency between the sort of 'Wilder family history' sections and the 'funny writer contemplates very real death in a lightning storm while whimsically camped out in a covered wagon' sections, but she makes it all work. It's an entertaining and touching book — and an essential for Little House fans, obviously. -- Linda Holmes, editor of NPR's Monkey See blog
Hardcover, 352 pages; Riverhead; list price, $25.95; publication date, April 14
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Reporter's Notebook
Recession diary: the long and winding road home, a man, woman, baby and an empty bank account, made for you and me, going west, going broke, finding home.
By Caitlin Shetterly
If you have listened to Weekend Edition for the past few years, than you're likely to remember the story of Caitlin Shetterly — she and her husband decided to leave their home in Maine and pursue the dream of living in California. Unfortunately, the recession hit, and suddenly the couple found themselves without jobs — and pregnant. The pair had to trek back across the country to squeeze into Shetterly's mother's house in Maine, and Shetterly blogged (and spoke) about the journey (and her dwindling bank account) along the way for NPR. The Shetterly family was just one of many hit hard by the economic downturn, but her graceful telling of her struggles with money, health and optimism is as unique as it is universal.
When Made for You and Me begins, Caitlin Shetterly and her husband, Dan, are sleeping in separate beds — and not by choice. They are living in her mother's house, two years after getting married, crammed into tiny beds a few feet away from each other. Her baby is nursing and needs constant attention, and Caitlin is lying alone in the dark, thinking about how her life got to this point. She wanted to live in Los Angeles, baking in the Western sun. She wanted to start a new life far away from Maine and her family, and yet here she was, married with a child, right back where she started. It is depressing. But then, all stories of the recession and how hard it has hit Americans at the individual level are bound to be filed away in the 'downers' category. That doesn't mean we shouldn't read them. I was looking forward to tucking into Shetterly's book, having very much enjoyed her segments on NPR; hoping for more of her battered-but-bouyant tone. I found this in droves — and I'd recommend the book to anyone personally affected by the downturn — but I do wish that Shetterly had dared to dive a little deeper into the recession writ large here, examining a world outside her own experience. Instead, the story feels a bit myopic — and unfinished. At the book's end, the Shetterlys are still struggling to make sense of it all. Perhaps that's a sign of the times — who can make sense of the economy right now? — and the fact that no family's story ties up neatly in a bow these days, but I still found myself craving more resolution and some solid advice for others confronting the same hardships. — Rachel Syme, books editor
Hardcover, 256 pages; Hyperion Voice; list price, $23.99; publication date, March 8
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A BOY NAMED JOHNNY CHAPMAN
by Melissa M. Cybulski ‧ RELEASE DATE: April 2, 2024
A sweet and inspiring children’s tale that encourages young readers to stay true to themselves.
Cybulski’s historical fiction book for children chronicles the adventures of Johnny Chapman, the little boy who would grow up to become the legendary Johnny Appleseed.
It’s 1783 and 9-year-old Johnny Chapman is living a quiet life with his father, stepmother, and siblings in Longmeadow, Massachusetts. After Johnny is repeatedly disciplined for daydreaming in school by the stern Master Loomis, his father pulls him out, maintaining that “dreamers like Johnny are exactly what this new nation needs.” But now the time has come for him to return to formal schooling with a different (and hopefully more lenient) teacher. While he’s initially nervous, Johnny turns out to have many exciting adventures during the school year, like performing in the Incorporation Day presentation to celebrate Longmeadow officially getting its name put on the map. A natural friend to all animals, Johnny has many exploits involving them—from assisting his neighbor corralling escaped sheep and attempting to help his classmate overcome her fear of bees after being stung to checking on the stable animals after a lightning strike burns down a neighbor’s barn. By year’s end, his stepmother praises Johnny for learning valuable lessons and overcoming his fear of school: “You are quietly brave. You had a fear and a shame that made you want to hide away at home…but you didn’t. You went and faced the thing that made you scared.” Lak’s rough black-and-white sketches, including a charming map of Longmeadow, help to contextualize the events of this early-reader chapter book. With clear prose and dialogue, Cybulski sprinkles in many real facts about Johnny’s life and home. The choice to focus on Johnny’s childhood, as opposed to the better-known stories of who he eventually becomes, is a fruitful one that pays off by lending a humanity and realness to a story that could easily have slipped into tall-tale embellishment.
Pub Date: April 2, 2024
ISBN: 9798882560446
Page Count: 161
Publisher: N/A
Review Posted Online: April 8, 2024
Review Program: Kirkus Indie
CHILDREN'S CONCEPTS | CHILDREN'S HISTORICAL FICTION | CHILDREN'S GENERAL CHILDREN'S
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STEALING HOME
by J. Torres ; illustrated by David Namisato ‧ RELEASE DATE: Oct. 5, 2021
An emotional, much-needed historical graphic novel.
Sandy and his family, Japanese Canadians, experience hatred and incarceration during World War II.
Sandy Saito loves baseball, and the Vancouver Asahi ballplayers are his heroes. But when they lose in the 1941 semifinals, Sandy’s dad calls it a bad omen. Sure enough, in December 1941, Japan bombs Pearl Harbor in the U.S. The Canadian government begins to ban Japanese people from certain areas, moving them to “dormitories” and setting a curfew. Sandy wants to spend time with his father, but as a doctor, his dad is busy, often sneaking out past curfew to work. One night Papa is taken to “where he [is] needed most,” and the family is forced into an internment camp. Life at the camp isn’t easy, and even with some of the Asahi players playing ball there, it just isn’t the same. Trying to understand and find joy again, Sandy struggles with his new reality and relationship with his father. Based on the true experiences of Japanese Canadians and the Vancouver Asahi team, this graphic novel is a glimpse of how their lives were affected by WWII. The end is a bit abrupt, but it’s still an inspiring and sweet look at how baseball helped them through hardship. The illustrations are all in a sepia tone, giving it an antique look and conveying the emotions and struggles. None of the illustrations of their experiences are overly graphic, making it a good introduction to this upsetting topic for middle-grade readers.
Pub Date: Oct. 5, 2021
ISBN: 978-1-5253-0334-0
Page Count: 112
Publisher: Kids Can
Review Posted Online: June 28, 2021
Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 15, 2021
CHILDREN'S HISTORICAL FICTION | GENERAL GRAPHIC NOVELS & COMICS
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BOOK REVIEW
by J. Torres ; illustrated by Sean Dove
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by J. Torres ; illustrated by Aurélie Grand
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NUMBER THE STARS
by Lois Lowry ‧ RELEASE DATE: April 1, 1989
A deftly told story that dramatizes how Danes appointed themselves bodyguards—not only for their king, who was in the habit...
The author of the Anastasia books as well as more serious fiction ( Rabble Starkey , 1987) offers her first historical fiction—a story about the escape of the Jews from Denmark in 1943.
Five years younger than Lisa in Carol Matas' Lisa's War (1989), Annemarie Johansen has, at 10, known three years of Nazi occupation. Though ever cautious and fearful of the ubiquitous soldiers, she is largely unaware of the extent of the danger around her; the Resistance kept even its participants safer by telling them as little as possible, and Annemarie has never been told that her older sister Lise died in its service. When the Germans plan to round up the Jews, the Johansens take in Annemarie's friend, Ellen Rosen, and pretend she is their daughter; later, they travel to Uncle Hendrik's house on the coast, where the Rosens and other Jews are transported by fishing boat to Sweden. Apart from Lise's offstage death, there is little violence here; like Annemarie, the reader is protected from the full implications of events—but will be caught up in the suspense and menace of several encounters with soldiers and in Annemarie's courageous run as courier on the night of the escape. The book concludes with the Jews' return, after the war, to homes well kept for them by their neighbors.
Pub Date: April 1, 1989
ISBN: 0547577095
Page Count: 156
Publisher: Houghton Mifflin
Review Posted Online: Oct. 17, 2011
Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 15, 1989
CHILDREN'S SOCIAL THEMES | CHILDREN'S HISTORICAL FICTION
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After a chance encounter, headstrong Kathy is drawn to Benny, member of Midwestern motorcycle club the Vandals. As the club transforms into a dangerous underworld of violence, Benny must cho... Read all After a chance encounter, headstrong Kathy is drawn to Benny, member of Midwestern motorcycle club the Vandals. As the club transforms into a dangerous underworld of violence, Benny must choose between Kathy and his loyalty to the club. After a chance encounter, headstrong Kathy is drawn to Benny, member of Midwestern motorcycle club the Vandals. As the club transforms into a dangerous underworld of violence, Benny must choose between Kathy and his loyalty to the club.
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Did you know
- Trivia This is Jeff Nichols' fifth collaboration with Michael Shannon.
Johnny : [from trailer] I've been thinking, I can run this club forever. I've built this from nothing. This is our family. You and me kid.
- Soundtracks Lonely Room Written by J. M. Rigter and Willie Murray Performed by Mickey Murray Courtesy of Sun Records
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- Runtime 1 hour 56 minutes
- Dolby Digital
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Johnny Appleseed Paperback – Picture Book, August 26, 2008
The larger-than-life story of a true American hero—John Chapman, better known as Johnny Appleseed.
This fun picture book has been a favorite for generations. Bursting with energy and perfect for reading aloud at home or in the classroom, Johnny Appleseed is an excellent choice for storytime.
"The brief text combining legend with fact, coupled with the picture book format, makes this life of Johnny Appleseed the most accessible and entertaining one available for young children," according to School Library Journal. Steven Kellogg "is ideal as interpreter of this fascinating man. An affectionate portrayal, enthusiastically accomplished," praised Booklist
A good supplement for units on tall tales, folktales, American history, apples, and seasons! And just a fun read-aloud for sharing.
- Reading age 4 - 8 years
- Print length 48 pages
- Language English
- Grade level Preschool - 3
- Lexile measure 920L
- Dimensions 8.5 x 0.11 x 11 inches
- Publisher HarperCollins
- Publication date August 26, 2008
- ISBN-10 0688140254
- ISBN-13 978-0688140250
- See all details
Product details
- Publisher : HarperCollins; Reprint edition (August 26, 2008)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 48 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0688140254
- ISBN-13 : 978-0688140250
- Reading age : 4 - 8 years
- Lexile measure : 920L
- Grade level : Preschool - 3
- Item Weight : 7.6 ounces
- Dimensions : 8.5 x 0.11 x 11 inches
- #10 in Children's United States Biographies (Books)
- #25 in Children's Colonial American Historical Fiction
- #32 in Children's Country Life Books
About the author
Steven kellogg.
With the same energy, humor and clarity found in his 50 books, David wows audiences at schools around the United States and beyond. David is an accomplished storyteller and a master at getting kids to think and have fun at the same time. His presentations lead children on entertaining and educational journeys that combine math, science, reading and writing. David also gives keynote presentations and workshops for educators at professional conferences.
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COMMENTS
Joshua Whitehead. 3.95. 14,888 ratings1,900 reviews. (Alternate cover edition of ISBN 1551527251 / 9781551527253.) "You're gonna need a rock and a whole lotta medicine" is a mantra that Jonny Appleseed, a young Two-Spirit/Indigiqueer, repeats to himself in this vivid and utterly compelling novel. Off the reserve and trying to find ways to live ...
Jonny Appleseed; By Joshua Whitehead; Arsenal Pulp Press; 224 pages; Every so often, a book comes along that feels like a milestone, with revolution nestled beneath every sentence, every word.
The novel Jonny Appleseed by Joshua Whitehead was originally published in 2018 by Arsenal Pulp Press.Whitehead, a queer Indigenous writer from Peguis Frist Nation, uses the auto-fictional character of Jonny to explore the intersections of LGBTQ+ and Indigenous identity. The novel was a 2021 Canada Reads Winner and the winner of a Lambda Literary Award.
"You're gonna need a rock and a whole lotta medicine," is a quote from Jonny Appleseed, and is the theme of this book.. Jonny Appleseed by Joshua Whitehead. Jonny Appleseed was written by Joshua Whitehead and was published in 2018. Since then, it has been nominated for the CBC Canada Reads 2021 and was awarded the Lambda Literary Award for Gay Fiction in 2019.
Jonny's world is a series of breakages, appendages and linkages — and as he goes through the motions of preparing to return home, he learns how to put together the pieces of his life. Jonny ...
Indeed, he has many feelings, about his childhood and his sexuality and his gender identity and his relationship with Tias (his on-and-off something) and his kokum (grandmother), and they all vie for attention with the business of making money to get home. There's a lot to unpack within the walls of Whitehead's novel, so I'll taper this ...
This is a real, relevant, and eye-opening book — an intense yet beautiful story written for voices that need to be heard. Jonny Appleseed is a sincere, honest story about a person's growth despite sometimes seemingly suffocating racism and homophobia. I especially enjoyed the intimate passages where Jonny reflects upon his life with Tias ...
Jonny Appleseed by Joshua Whitehead is a beautifully written character driven novel about a Two-Spirit/Indigiqueer character. The novel centres around Jonny and his life in and outside the reservation. Jonny moves to Winnipeg for a better life, eventually working as a sex worker. The story is told in vignettes of Jonny's life, leading up to ...
While hustling through cybersex gigs to get money for his trip, Johnny will introduce the cast of characters that make up his life. Jonny's Two-Spirit Indigiqueer identity is a large part of the construction of his character: his relation to his grandma (Kokum), his mother, and others around him often highlights their acceptance, or denial, of his identity. He grows to be an attaching ...
The thesis of this review is: read this book! I'm going to do my best to describe it to you, but Joshua Whitehead's words are so much more beautiful than anything I can come up with. ... > READ. THIS. BOOK. (Johnny Appleseed) READ. THIS. BOOK. (Johnny Appleseed) Johnny Appleseed by Joshua Whitehead. August 23, 2021 by msvreadsbooks 2 ...
Book Review Whitehead, J. (2018). Jonny Appleseed. Vancouver: Arsenal Pulp Press. 224 pages. ISBN: 978-1-55152-725-3 Jonny Appleseed, author Joshua Whitehead's debut novel, pops off the page in a flash of love and heartbreak. The eponymous tale of a young, Indigenous Two-Spirit queer man carving
Book Review: Johnny Appleseed, ... It was the wandering Johnny Appleseed that rescued the book for me — Chapman leaving his Massachusetts home for scarce-settled Pennsylvania river lands, and ...
Johnny Appleseed: The Man, the Myth, the American Story Paperback - Big Book, April 17, 2012 by Howard Means (Author) 4.3 4.3 out of 5 stars 87 ratings
Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 15, 2006. Categories: CHILDREN'S BIOGRAPHY & MEMOIR. Share your opinion of this book. Yolen wants it both ways: Johnny Appleseed the legend and John Chapman the somewhat fruity ("There is no doubt Johnny is strange") Swedenborgian apple-tree merchant. So she tells two tales here in a call-and-response fashion: a ...
The clever and expertly written story will tickle the funny bones of the nursery-school set, although the clutter of the comic illustrations—with dialogue balloons, lines indicating movement, and frenetic action—makes this better for lap-sharing than story hours. (Picture book. 3-6) Share your opinion of this book.
― Midwest Book Review This book takes away the dross of mythology, but replaces it with the realistic humanity of a most fascinating unique American . . . Highly recommended. ... That relocation renewed his interest in the legendary apple tree planter, and his book, Johnny Appleseed and the American Orchard (Johns Hopkins University Press ...
Steven Kellogg. 3.98. 2,483 ratings223 reviews. John Chapman, better known as Johnny Appleseed, was a historical figure whose wilderness adventures became larger-than-life legends. Born in Massachusetts during the Revolutionary War, John headed west as soon as he was able. Along the way, he cleared land and planted orchards so he could supply ...
Johann Sebastian emerges as little more than a brat, Reincken as more of a suggestion than a character. Bush's illustrations are most transporting when offering details of the landscape, but his protagonist is too impish to give the story much authority. (Picture book. 5-9) Pub Date: March 1, 1999. ISBN: -531-30140-.
Bill Kauffman reviews Howard Means's "Johnny Appleseed: The Man, the Myth, the American Story."
Johnny Appleseed. Hardcover - Picture Book, August 22, 1988. by Steven Kellogg (Author, Illustrator) 228. Part of: Tall Tales Books (4 books) See all formats and editions. The larger-than-life story of a true American hero—John Chapman, better known as Johnny Appleseed. This fun picture book has been a favorite for generations.
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A sweet and inspiring children's tale that encourages young readers to stay true to themselves. Cybulski's historical fiction book for children chronicles the adventures of Johnny Chapman, the little boy who would grow up to become the legendary Johnny Appleseed. It's 1783 and 9-year-old Johnny Chapman is living a quiet life with his ...
Listen. (3 min) Willie Nelson, Waylon Jennings, Johnny Cash and Kris Kristofferson of the Highwaymen in 1992. Photo: Rob Verhorst/Redferns/Getty Images. In the mid-1980s, an over-the-hill quartet ...
The Bikeriders: Directed by Jeff Nichols. With Jodie Comer, Austin Butler, Tom Hardy, Michael Shannon. After a chance encounter, headstrong Kathy is drawn to Benny, member of Midwestern motorcycle club the Vandals. As the club transforms into a dangerous underworld of violence, Benny must choose between Kathy and his loyalty to the club.
Paperback - Picture Book, August 26, 2008. The larger-than-life story of a true American hero—John Chapman, better known as Johnny Appleseed. This fun picture book has been a favorite for generations. Bursting with energy and perfect for reading aloud at home or in the classroom, Johnny Appleseed is an excellent choice for storytime.