Matthew Holm
Author of Babymouse, Queen of the World!
About the Author
Image credit: Holm at the 2017 Texas Book Festival By Larry D. Moore, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=64095939
Series
Works by Matthew Holm
A Babymouse Flip Book: THRILLS! (Queen of the World + Our Hero): (A Graphic Novel) (2024) — Author — 4 copies
Babymouse : — Author — 4 copies
Associated Works
Beautiful Data: The Stories Behind Elegant Data Solutions (2009) — Contributor — 274 copies, 3 reviews
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Reviews
Why didn't this book exist when I was 12? For this generation, it could be as significant as a Judy Blume novel. It's the story of Sunny, sent to spend the summer in Florida with her grandfather because her older brother is dealing with drug and alcohol issues. She's an endearing girl who thinks deep thoughts and makes friends of all ages as a fish out of water in a retirement community. I am going to buy it for my middle school age nephew - it is THAT universal. Wish me luck!
This treatment of a serious subject just blew me away! It's a child's view of how her beloved big brother's problems with drugs and alcohol impact her and her family. It's not super heavy or a downer, but hopeful and funny. The authors do a great job of showing how even as Sunny goes along her life being a kid, she's still concerned about her brother and hoping he gets better. And set in the '70s, the illustrations are spot on in period details. Gee Your Hair Smells Terrific shampoo--yikes! show more Barbie macrame toilet paper cover--grotesque! Grampa's medicine cabinet and mirror combo--I grew up with that! Wood-paneled walls--arrghhh! Jeans pocket notebook binder--aaaaaahhh! Fantastic! show less
September 1976, Pennsylvania. (I was 2 months away from my 7th birthday!)
Lots of memories in this for me - General Hospital, Swamp Thing, Six Million Dollar Man, Donny & Marie - all gave me a smile! Heck, I even gave my daughter a Pet Rock a few years ago!
And that same daughter, who started middle school this year, really related to how Sunny feels about school! It is a good read, full of real emotions and the highs and lows of that age. Her feelings about her brother's situation read like a show more true story. I liked it and she liked it, so check it out! show less
Lots of memories in this for me - General Hospital, Swamp Thing, Six Million Dollar Man, Donny & Marie - all gave me a smile! Heck, I even gave my daughter a Pet Rock a few years ago!
And that same daughter, who started middle school this year, really related to how Sunny feels about school! It is a good read, full of real emotions and the highs and lows of that age. Her feelings about her brother's situation read like a show more true story. I liked it and she liked it, so check it out! show less
Sunny is looking forward to her awesome summer vacation going to the beach with her best friend...and then she gets sent off to stay with her grandfather at his retirement community in Florida. What Sunny views as a punishment is actually her family trying to shield her from her brother's trip to rehab. Sunny Side Up by Jennifer L. Holm and Matthew Holm looks at substance abuse from the viewpoint of a younger sibling which is rather refreshing and ultimately important when a child is trying show more to find books that relate to themselves. (I don't know anyone with a picture perfect childhood so it's a good idea if children's literature reflects that.) The references to substance abuse are rather oblique for the majority of the book so it's not heavy handed in the slightest. For the most part, we see Sunny acting pretty snotty as she comes to terms with the fact her summer is not going to be anything like she had planned but intermixed with that is a healthy dose of fear, anxiety, and shame. Remember she has no idea what has caused her family to send her away but she think she must have done something terribly wrong. (Also, her grandfather is the mack daddy of the retirement community and it's hilarious.) She does manage to make a friend of commensurate age though and the two of them develop a mutual interest in superheroes and comics.
It's hard to say where the author lands in terms of keeping family secrets (they experienced something similar to Sunny in reality) but what the reader does see is Sunny learning about the difficulty of maintaining secret identities as she gets into reading comics. By the end, she is told what has happened with her brother and the reader (if they hadn't already figured it out) sees all the puzzle pieces fall into place. Because the reader is seeing everything through the eyes of Sunny the reading experience is quite different from some of the realistic fiction on this topic that I've read before. I think from that standpoint this is quite a unique and important book especially for children who have experienced this and are feeling quite alone and isolated. In fact, at the end they tacked on a bit about talking to someone if you know a family member is struggling with substance abuse. If you're creating a booklist for your students and you're looking for material that touches on substance abuse and/or family dynamics you could do a lot worse than picking Sunny Side Up. 8/10 show less
It's hard to say where the author lands in terms of keeping family secrets (they experienced something similar to Sunny in reality) but what the reader does see is Sunny learning about the difficulty of maintaining secret identities as she gets into reading comics. By the end, she is told what has happened with her brother and the reader (if they hadn't already figured it out) sees all the puzzle pieces fall into place. Because the reader is seeing everything through the eyes of Sunny the reading experience is quite different from some of the realistic fiction on this topic that I've read before. I think from that standpoint this is quite a unique and important book especially for children who have experienced this and are feeling quite alone and isolated. In fact, at the end they tacked on a bit about talking to someone if you know a family member is struggling with substance abuse. If you're creating a booklist for your students and you're looking for material that touches on substance abuse and/or family dynamics you could do a lot worse than picking Sunny Side Up. 8/10 show less
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Statistics
- Works
- 19
- Also by
- 4
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- 6,152
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- #3,996
- Rating
- 3.9
- Reviews
- 229
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