Mobile Library: A Novel

by David Whitehouse

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A deeply moving, tragicomic adventure about a boy who escapes his small town in a stolen library on wheels in search of freedom, friendship, and, most of all, family.

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26 reviews
Bobby Nusku is nearly alone in the world. He spends his nights meticulously archiving the traces his long-absent mother left behind. He spends his days plotting with his only friend, Sunny, trying to contrive ways to protect himself from neighborhood bullies and an abusive father. But the stories they tell and the realities they live are painfully far apart, and when Sunny is forced to move away, Bobby fears he has no one else to turn to.
Then Bobby encounters two outcasts like himself: Rosa, a girl with a red tricycle who collects names in her notebook and whose disability invites the scorn of the same bullies that haunt Bobby; and Val, her mother, a lonely divorcee who cleans the town's mobile library for work. They connect deeply, show more filling the gaps in each other's lives, but the bond between the older woman and young boy also draws the town's suspicion and outrage, as rumors begin to fly about the nature of their relationship. Val loses her job, Bobby is beaten severely by his father, and, with worse sure to follow, they abscond with Rosa in their sixteen-wheel bookmobile, embarking on a picaresque adventure that comes to rival those in the classic books that fill their library on wheels. show less
½
[This is a review I wrote in 2016]

I’m not sure what I was expecting when I chose Mobile Library as my next read; something cute and fluffy about books and reading perhaps. The story is about a 12 year old boy and I think I was expecting a children’s book. What I got was something quite different. Mobile Library is something of a contemporary fairy tale, complete with all the dark and dismal parts that usually crop up in fairy tales, as well as the redeeming fairy-godmother.

Twelve-year-old Bobby lives a bleak and lonely life, devoid of affection since his mother died. His father and girlfriend appear to care little for Bobby and show little interest in the boy, except for when they are venting their anger. When he’s at home Bobby show more spends his time neatly arranging and rearranging memories of his mother into files, or boxes, so that she can pick up her life where she left off when she returns… Bobby is also bullied at school but has a best friend, Sunny, who is his greatest protector. Bobby and Sunny are on a mission to turn Sunny into a cyborg so that he can protect Bobby from bad things forever.

Then Bobby meets Rosa when he’s passing by her house on his way home from school. She is 13 and she asks Bobby if he’d like to play. She has a disability of some sort, has a loving and trusting nature and immediately takes to Bobby as a friend. Rosa is attacked by the same bullies picking on Bobby (while Bobby, through fear hides in the bushes) and through this situation Bobby comes to meet Val, Rosa’s mum. Val and Rosa both warm to Bobby very quickly and take him into their hearts. Bobby spends more and more time with them, learning better how to communicate (after the silence he endures at home), taking baths (another forbidden thing at home), reading books, playing, eating proper meals and indulging in treats like ice cream (not allowed, his father says). Val enjoys Bobby’s company – for many years she has had little company other than her daughter – and Bobby feels love and a sense of belonging for the first time since his mother’s death. The little trio start to become like a functional family unit, although Bobby still has to go home to his father at the end of the day.

" ‘In every book is a clue about life,’ Val said. ‘That’s how stories are connected. You bring them to life when you read them, so that the things that happen in them will happen to you.’

‘I don’t think the things that happen in books will happen in my life,’ he said.

‘That’s where you’re wrong,’ she said. ‘You just don’t recognise them yet.’ "

Then events occur which put their surrogate son-mother relationship in danger and Val decides to take off across the country with Bobby and Rosa in the mobile library which she cleans once a week. In their time together this library has become like a dreamworld to Bobby – full of stories, adventures and escapism:

"Morning hours vanished somewhere inside the books. Bobby read The Little Prince by Antoine de Saint-Exupery, amazed that a man whose name he couldn’t pronounce might write a story that seemed like it was written just for him. Like the young prince, he too found the adult world strange. He too saw very few certainties in it."

They encounter quite a number of adventures while travelling and trying to evade detection, including picking up a fellow traveller-on-the-run who leads them all the way up to Scotland, from middle England, and back down and Bobby, Rosa and Val are all having the times of their lives when reality strikes. Will they be able to stay together in their new-found family unit…?

The novel starts at the end, which I didn’t particularly mind; it’s usually a device that annoys me as I like the novel to tell the story but in this case it is the ending told from a slightly different narrative perspective to the actual ending which is narrated in more detail and with Val’s voice, so the story isn’t fully revealed at the beginning. I didn’t get into the book right away, perhaps because it was so different to what I was expecting. I found the characters all a bit extreme and therefore not very believable and the plot a bit far-fetched. But. Then I settled into the fairy-tale-type style and it no longer mattered to me if the characterisation was over-the-top and the accumulation of events unbelievable; the characters were living out their own story and that’s when it started to work for me and fall into place. There’s no doubt that child abuse on this level does take place, disability discrimination, and so on. And there’s no doubt that reading stories, along with love and nurture, can really help unlock a child’s potential. The author also explores the theme of imagination and how far one can go with imagination before harm is done, i.e. is it always good to be imaginative, or should the self or another inflict boundaries to protect you from harm? A number of deep themes are explored.

There is some interesting philosophising in the novel, some great snippets about books, reading and the influences of literature, and some deeply disturbing aspects regarding child abuse and abusive relationships. It is not a novel for children, that much is clear but it doesn’t otherwise fit into a neatly arranged category. It is a good, thoughtful read. I often find it easy to forget a book almost as soon as I’ve read it but I won’t forget this one. The book isn’t perfect and can feel overdone and blatant but I would recommend it, particularly for the universal message about the power of stories to change, heal and transform.

About the Author

David Whitehouse was born in 1981 and lives in London. His first novel, Bed, won the inaugural 2010 To Hell With Prizes Award for unpublished work, the 2012 Betty Trask Prize and has been published in eighteen countries. His journalism has appeared in the national press and he has undertaken TV and film projects as well.
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David Whitehouse’s Mobile Library is a hard book to categorize—both painful and funny, absurd and wise.

Young Bobby has become an archivist of his own home and life, compulsively recording every minor event and fact so he can share them with his mother, who has disappeared, but who he’s sure will return. Bullied at school and ignored (at best) by his father, Bobby builds his own family among people he meets who share, each in her or his own way, his sense of isolation.

There’s Sunny, who is determined to become a cyborg in order to protect his friend—breaking one bone at a time, so that they can be repaired with steel plates. There’s Rosa, who is developmentally disabled and who has a fascination with names, and her mother show more Val. When Sunny disappears and Bobby’s father grows violent, the remaining three—Bobby, Rosa, and Val—take to the road in a mobile library.

I’d expected this book to be a lighter read than it is. In fact, it is at times distressing. Nonetheless, the characters compel the reader to keep going—and the solution, though unexpected, is quite satisfactory.
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When I was a child I eagerly awaited the fortnightly visits from the bright green Mobile Library bus that parked just outside my door, so I couldn't resist this title.

Mobile Library by David Whitehouse is the big hearted, quirky story of twelve year old, Bobby Nusku, abused by his drunken father and bullied by his schoolmates. His only friend's attempts to defend him end in disaster and Bobby is alone again, pining for his missing mother, until he meets Rosa, and her mother, Val. Val, the cleaner of a mobile library, shows Bobby how books can help him to escape the miserable confines of his world, and when everything goes wrong, only the mobile library can save them all.

I've mentioned before that I dislike prologue's. Whitehouse starts show more Mobile Library with 'The End' and it wasn't until at least halfway through the book that I forgave him. Though it took a while, I eventually got caught up in Bobby's story as the author brought it to life with good humour, warmth and poignancy.

A charming, but offbeat, story, Mobile Library is a novel about friendship, family, love and stories, a tale of adventure and danger, heroes and villains, not-so-happy and happy endings.
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½
Bobby Nusku is confused and lonely. His mother left when he was much younger and his father is neglectful and abusive. Bobby's only friend is Sunny who wants to become a cyborg to protect Bobby from the local bullies but when Sunny moves away, Bobby is left on his own. Then he befriends Rosa, a disabled girl who is also bullied, and Rosa's mother Val. Val is warm and kind and Bobby seeks refuge with her. However an innocent and protective friendship is misinterpreted and Val goes on the run with Bobby, Rosa and Bert the dog, in the only transport available to them, the mobile library that Val cleans. Travelling the length of the country, one step ahead of the law, the unlikely group is augmented by Joe - a troubled man with a back show more story.

This is a lovely book. One needs to suspend belief about much of the action (how much does fuel cost!) but the sentiments are wonderful. Each character has issues to deal with, Rosa's disability is not defined and the details of Joe's life are presented as fragments, both work far better than a long description would. The heart of the story is Bobby, how he mourns his mother's absence,creating files of hair and cloth as memories, and, as the story unfolds, the reasons for that absence are slowly revealed. Bobby's relationship with Sunny is very pure and touching, two children adrift on the cusp of adolescence. The link between them all is the love of literature.
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I want to thank Edelwiess (Above the Treeline) and Scribner for approving the ARC of [b:Mobile Library A Novel|21412232|Mobile Library A Novel|David Whitehouse|https://d.gr-assets.com/books/1400932133s/21412232.jpg|40713233] by [a:David Whitehouse|191633|David Whitehouse|https://s.gr-assets.com/assets/nophoto/user/u_50x66-a7c55399ea455530473b9f9e4da94c40.png].

This book took me on a great adventure. Whenever I read a book, it always reminds me of a journey in some type of vehicle. The title says it all, regarding the mode of transport of this exciting story.

The first chapter is called, "The End." Right away, I misjudged the situation in the first chapter. Was it accidental, or a nudge from the author?

The townspeople assume the worst show more about Val (The mobile librarian), and I as a reader immediately was disgusted by my perception of what Val was doing to young Bobby.

My feelings on sexual child abuse are probably over the top anyway, but I wrestled with my sense of logic, to continue reading, rather than deleting this from my existence. I am glad I continued to read. I was as wrong as the town folk who misread Val.

Things are not always as they appear, one cannot judge a person by real or imagined dirt, and it is possible to judge a book by it's cover.

Val, a public servant cleans, and tends to a giant of a bookmobile, she has a daughter with special needs, and she is a single parent. She meets imaginative and displaced Bobby, and ends up providing him the ride of a lifetime, introduces him to literature in a living way. Her daughter Rosa loves Bobby like a brother, and they are all surprised by the addition of Joe to their strange and felonious family.

"The Mobile Library: A Novel" turned me on my ear, and gave me a "book hangover." Putting it mildly; there are twists and turns at every juncture.

Once having read a book, I am done; usually, in the case of "Mobile Library: A Novel," not so. The end is the beginning, and the beginning the end...Confused yet? Like the wheels on a bookmobile, circular, circular...

Bobby, Rosa, Val, Joe, and Bert the Dog become a family, formed like a conglomeration, that seem to withstand the worst the world can throw at them.

I highly recommend this for bibliophiles, and librarians, and library workers in every capacity. I have requested it for our library.
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It's hard to categorize this book. Family, processing grief, loyalty, protecting those you love, holding onto your humanity in face of abuse. Acceptance: yourself, others and Reality. Heavy stuff in a surprisingly light weight form of prose. I admire the writing style. Not one extra syllable with out being terse. It's not easy to read as the emotions it pulls out are the big ones.

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Author Information

Picture of author.
6 Works 470 Members

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Merkel, Dorothee (Übersetzer)

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Common Knowledge

Canonical title*
La piccola biblioteca con le ali
Original title
Mobile library
Original publication date
2015
*Some information comes from Common Knowledge in other languages. Click "Edit" for more information.

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, General Fiction
DDC/MDS
823.92Literature & rhetoricEnglish & Old English literaturesEnglish fiction1900-2000-
LCC
PR6123 .H58657 .M63Language and LiteratureEnglishEnglish Literature2001-
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159,916
Reviews
23
Rating
½ (3.73)
Languages
5 — English, French, German, Italian, Portuguese
Media
Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
ISBNs
23
ASINs
5