Rating:   Summary: A novel full of pain Review: Other reviewers do a good job of summing up what the book is about, so I  won't try to do that. But I will point out that it is almost unremittingly  harsh and violent. The book and the main character do, as the title  suggest, soar beyond that, but this material can be hard to read. For those  for whom this hits too close to home, every insult and slap will sting. For  those who don't already have this kind of violence in their lives, you may  not wish to bring it in. It's definitely something to consider before you  jump in.
  Rating:   Summary: Connie May teaches us to fly Review: Connie May Fowler introduces us to a six year old girl, known as Bird because most people refused to believe someone was really called Avocet.  Although Bird knows no other life, we readers immediately realise she's  trapped in a dreadful existence - alcoholic, emotionally and physically  abusive and desperately poor.  Not a new story, but certainly not  derivitive.We see the cycle of family dysfunction, brought on by lost  dreams, violence, poverty, hopelessness and alcoholism from Bird's  perspective as she desperately tries to make sense of it all.  Adding to  her confusion, she tries to find hope in religion, where even that is the  cause of a family rift - the children are divided between the Baptist  father and Catholic mother, and Bird is devastated when she finds she will  never be a Bride of Christ, like her sister.  Except for the extremes,  Bird's childhood is not that different from many of ours. I'm sure I wasn't  the only reader remembering the confusion of childhood, trying to make  sense of adults' behaviour, the strange religious stories, and the weird  stuff taught at school, wondering why everything that goes wrong is our  fault, enduring the cruelty inflicted by other children, desperately  longing to be loved and safe.  But if we were lucky, we had a warm bed,  food on the table, arms that hugged us and told us we were loved.  Among  the not so fortunate, Bird could take none these for granted.   Although  there are countless stories of difficult childhoods, deprived by abuse,  alcoholism, poverty and endless other dysfunctions, there was something  about Bird's voice that rang clear and true - perhaps because it was  written from the perspective of a child, rather than an adult's  recollection, perhaps because she never asked for pity, perhaps because you  always knew someone so gutsy would survive. They say you don't need to  have murdered to write of a murder, but as I was reading, I found it  impossible to believe this story could be written without experiencing that  childhood, and having read your interview with the author, I understand it  is at least partially autobiographical. I also thought it would be an  excellent choice for Oprah's Book Club, and now realise it was, obviously  before I started watching Oprah. I picked up this book while browsing  through the library in the (increasingly difficult) search for something I  want to read and added it to my stack of books after flicking through and  reading a few random paragraphs.  What a wonderful accident!  Now I've  added a new author to my list.
  Rating:   Summary: Awesome characterization Review: Bird is so alive and real that a reader wants to take her home and mother her.  This is a book that I read years ago and this is a character who still haunts me when I read yet another local news story about child abuse.   Connie May Fowler really has captured the scenery of Florida and weaved in  some of its darker side into a compelling tale.
 
 
   
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