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The Great Unexpected by Sharon Creech
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The Great Unexpected

by Sharon Creech

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Loved the characters. Loved the settings. Loved the mild suspense. Love Sharon Creech's way with words. ( )
  MontLancLibrary | May 8, 2013 |
I love Sharon Creech's ability to create quirky characters but this cast was a little over the top and distracted me from the story itself. Pleasant reading, but far from her best. ( )
  KimJD | Apr 8, 2013 |
Really great. Such a strong beginning, love the strong voice right from the moment the dead boy falls from the tree. ( )
  JenGennari | Apr 6, 2013 |
This book has friendship, boys coming between sisters, mysterious characters, crows (or rooks?), Ireland and America, dogs, traumatic pasts, orphans, small towns... all unfortunately jumbled together into a mess. I enjoyed Naomi and Lizzie well enough (although Lizzie read like Anne of Green Gables on speed and I kind of wanted to muzzle her most of the time... I have no soul). But I could not have cared less about the interspersed chapters with the elderly ladies in Ireland, and the corresponding elderly folks in America. They were supposed to be mysterious, but I just found them confusing and trying, and I suspect many of my kids will, too. Instead of lending a sense of wonder, all the unexplained bits and too-convenient connections between characters just made me feel like the book hadn't been thought through well enough. ( )
  SamMusher | Mar 29, 2013 |
Two orphaned girls in a small town called Blackbird Tree meet a boy who falls out of a tree. Strange and unexpected things begin to happen, and lives both near and far intermingle in surprising ways. What appears to be sinister is really very sweet, and a girl who appears to have no one finds family in unimagined ways. I enjoyed the gentle humor and the theme of belonging, but I found the story disjointed and confusing, and I really wonder what children will think of it. I think this may be one of those books for kids that is really for adults.

Creech, S. (2012). The great unexpected. New York: Joanna Cotler Books/HarperCollins.
  AMQS | Mar 24, 2013 |
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This is "...an enchanting page-turner filled with secrets, humor, decisions, "coincidences," and deeper meanings."
 
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Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0061892327, Hardcover)

I had big thoughts to match the big wind. I wondered if we find the people we need when we need them. I wondered if we attract our future by some sort of invisible force, or if we are drawn to it by a similar force. I felt I was turning a corner and that change was afoot.

In the little town of Blackbird Tree live two orphan girls: one Naomi Deane, brimming with curiosity, and her best friend, Lizzie Scatterding, who could talk the ears off a cornfield. Naomi has a knack for being around when trouble happens. For she knows all the peculiar people in town—like Crazy Cora and Witch Wiggins and Mr. Farley. But then, one day, a boy drops out of a tree. The strangely charming Finn boy. Then the Dingle Dangle man appears, asking all kinds of questions. Curious surprises are revealed—three locked trunks, a pair of rooks, a crooked bridge, and that boy. Soon Naomi and Lizzie find themselves zooming toward a future neither could ever have imagined. Meanwhile, on a grand estate across the ocean, an old lady whose heart has been deceived concocts a plan. . . .

As two very different worlds are woven together, Newbery Medal winner Sharon Creech celebrates the gossamer thread that connects us all, and the great and unexpected gifts of love, friendship, and forgiveness.

(retrieved from Amazon Thu, 14 Feb 2013 13:55:16 -0500)

"In the little town of Blackbird Tree live two orphan girls: one Naomi Deane, brimming with curiosity, and her best friend, Lizzie Scatterding, who could talk the ears off a cornfield. Naomi has a knack for being around when trouble happens. For she knows all the peculiar people in town--like Crazy Cora and Witch Wiggins and Mr. Farley. But then, one day, a boy drops out of a tree. The strangely charming Finn boy. Then the Dingle Dangle man appears, asking all kinds of questions. Curious surprises are revealed--three locked trunks, a pair of rooks, a crooked bridge, and that boy. Soon Naomi and Lizzie find themselves zooming toward a future neither could ever have imagined. Meanwhile, on a grand estate across the ocean, an old lady whose heart has been deceived concocts a plan. . . "--Publisher.… (more)

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