The Night Gift

The Night Gift is a novel for juvenile readers by Patricia A. McKillip, first published in hardcover by Atheneum in June 1976 and reprinted in trade paperback by Aladdin/Atheneum in April 1980.[1]

The Night Gift
Cover of first edition
AuthorPatricia A. McKillip
IllustratorKathy McKillip
Cover artistKathy McKillip
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
GenreYoung adult fiction
PublisherAtheneum
Publication date
1976
Media typePrint (hardcover)
Pages156
ISBN0-689-30508-7

Summary

Young Joe Takaoto, finding his room and life ugly, attempts suicide and is sent to a sanitorium. His sister Barbara resolves to create a haven of beauty for him to help him recover.

Barbara's high school friend Joslyn relates the story of how the two of them, joined by their harelipped friend Claudia, fix up a room for Joe in an abandoned old house old shack, painting it and decorating it with windchimes, shells, plants, books and such. Joslyn's own brother Brian also helps out. Bringing down a redwood sapling from the mountains the girls get a ride back from Neil, Joslyn's crush. Learning he actually likes Barbara, she buries her disappointment, putting friendship first.

When Joe comes home, his seeming indifference to the project leaves the friends bereft. Only after he returns to the sanitarium do they discover he did value their gift.

Reception

Christine Mozlin in School Library Journal calls the book "a poignant story" in which "the almost lyrical descriptions of setting and emotion totally involve readers in the plot and in the personal problems of the characters."[2]

Notes

  1. The Night Gift title listing at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
  2. Mozlin, Christine. Review in School Library Journal, v. 22, iss. 8, April 1, 1976, p. 91.
gollark: Physics has fairly simple laws from which other stuff can be derived. Chemistry contains 198791874819471984712849 rules for 1092471894712894 situations which also won't work in another 1748917240891274089124. This is uncool.
gollark: They are of course not negatively affected by it due to femtoapioformic shielding.
gollark: Chemistry is an uncool science, so our nanobots ignored it by just disassembling unwanted molecules.
gollark: They did this, but only after self-replicating using some unwanted pixels as feedstock.
gollark: It *did* contain no nanobots, but obviously they moved around to enter your opening bracket and assemble μparantheses and APIONET nodes inside it.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.