Picture of author.

Katherine Holubitsky

Author of Alone at Ninety Foot

8 Works 231 Members 10 Reviews

About the Author

Image credit: willowawards.ca

Works by Katherine Holubitsky

Alone at Ninety Foot (1999) 80 copies
Tweaked (2008) 80 copies
The Hippie House (2004) 25 copies
The Mountain That Walked (2005) 16 copies
Last Summer in Agatha (2001) 12 copies
Hipių namas (2006) 1 copy
Ensam på jorden (2001) 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1955
Gender
female
Nationality
Canada
Birthplace
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Places of residence
Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
Education
Simon Fraser University

Members

Reviews

The prose in this book is very good and honest without being melodramatic. I would definitely recommend it.
 
Flagged
worddragon | 2 other reviews | Mar 2, 2022 |
This book was so... depressing.

Alarmingly realistic depiction of living with drug addiction. If you've ever had a family member or friend with a serious drug addiction problem, you'll understand this story all too well. If not, you will understand how addictions are such destructive forces, not just for the people who do the drugs.

It did feel a bit didactic at times, but overall, it was a good, if not pleasant, read.
½
 
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ErlangerFactionless | 5 other reviews | Apr 28, 2013 |
Having grown up in Lynn Valley and having had Lynn Canyon as my backyard, this book threw me back to my teenage years. The main character is dealing with the usual high school dilemmas, as well as the unexpected death of her mother.
 
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JMBridger | 2 other reviews | Feb 16, 2013 |
1999’s CLA Young Adult Canadian Book Award winner Alone at Ninety Foot, is a bitter-sweet story of 14-year-old Pamela who struggles to make sense of her mother’s suicide, her father’s loneliness, and her own adolescent emotional confusion amidst the backdrop of Ninety Foot, the gorge at Lynn Canyon Creek Park. Author Holubitsky gives Pamela an authentic introspective voice, filled with the insecurity, longing, and selfishness that plagues young people from puberty and into the adult life. The gorge is a powerful literal and metaphorical stand-in in for the immensity of life that threatens to knock us over at a young age and Holubitsky’s writing conveys this well. Alone at Ninety Foot is real without being overdramatic. Friends, loss, first love, disappointment, grief, and suicide flow out of this excellent novel for young teens. Other notable awards: IODE Violet Downey Book Award Winner; Best Book for Young Adults-American Library Association; New York Public Library Books for the Teen Age; Best Books for Young Adults-teacher Librarian Magazine. Also recommend B. Brenna’s Wild Orchid (2006).… (more)
 
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Dalmlis1 | 2 other reviews | Mar 6, 2011 |

Awards

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Statistics

Works
8
Members
231
Popularity
#97,643
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
10
ISBNs
29
Languages
2

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