Snow Apples - Hardcover

Razzell, Mary

  • 3.47 out of 5 stars
    60 ratings by Goodreads
 
9780888997418: Snow Apples

Synopsis

While the rest of the world celebrates the end of World War II, sixteen-year-old Sheila Brary finds life in a remote British Columbia outpost suffocating and isolating. A household full of brothers, a philandering father, and, most of all, Sheila’s demanding, embittered mother all stand in the way of a bright, beautiful teenager who dreams of continuing her schooling and becoming a nurse. The mother-daughter relationship at the heart of this haunting novel is both timeless and complex, and the two strong, rebellious women are more alike than they care to admit. One meets the demands of a sexist age with resentment and anger, while the other struggles to break away. In the end, Sheila defies her mother by pursuing a romance with a local carpenter. But when she becomes pregnant, she turns to her father for help, with devastating results.

First published in 1984, Snow Apples remains a classic — a gritty, uncompromising story about a young woman who struggles to choose her own path amidst formidable obstacles of family, place, and time.

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Reviews

Grade 8 Up–In isolated, rural British Columbia, as World War II is ending, Sheila Brary turns 16 and yearns for a life different from the sad existence of her mother. Struggling to raise four sons and a daughter mostly on her own, the woman has turned hard and cold, always angry at her bright and emotional daughter who reminds her too much of her unfaithful, undependable husband. Sheila finds connection with other adults and develops a bond with Helga, who long ago lost her husband and sons to the ocean. The teen wins one struggle with her mother and manages to finish high school, while she loses another with her own awakening sexuality and finds herself desperate and pregnant. When she runs off to Vancouver, her distant father helps her to abort the pregnancy and then abandons her one last time. Sheila survives a terrifying miscarriage on her own, returns to her family long enough to see what her mother has sacrificed, and starts a new life with promise and support. This is a quiet, introspective novel that takes a while to build its power, and it has some stunningly dramatic scenes. Somewhat autobiographical, Snow Apples is imbued with difficult themes, from poverty and ambition to sexuality and abuse to emotional abandonment and growth. For mature, thoughtful readers, it will inspire discussions of the struggles of women in recent history.–Susan Oliver, Tampa-Hillsborough Public Library System, FL
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*Starred Review* Gr. 9-12. First published in Canada in 1984, this gripping first novel tells of a teen's coming-of-age with a complexity rare in YA fiction. Sheila Brary, 16, growing up in a small coastal town near Vancouver in the mid-1940s, is smart and sexy, and she wants to stay in school. But her jealous mom, disappointed and frustrated by her cheating, irresponsible husband, tries to prevent Sheila from getting anywhere: "You're just like him. Selfish." When Sheila goes all the way with the boy she loves, her mother breaks it up, and Sheila gets helps from unexpected sources for the painful abortion that leaves her sad and guilty. Time and place are an integral part of the story, and Sheila's struggle with work and love, even while it dramatizes the oppression of women, is never preachy. Rivalry, anger, affection, and friendship drive the plot, and rooted in character, the action springs from family secrets that continually surprise the reader. As in the best stories, however, the revelations turn out to be not surprising at all. Hazel Rochman
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

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Other Popular Editions of the Same Title

9780888997289: Snow Apples

Featured Edition

ISBN 10:  0888997280 ISBN 13:  9780888997289
Publisher: Groundwood Books, 2006
Softcover