Orchards by Holly Thompson

Orchards

by Holly Thompson

Sent to Japan for the summer after an eighth-grade classmate's suicide, half-Japanese, half-Jewish Kana Goldberg tries to fit in with relatives she barely knows and reflects on the guilt she feels over the tragedy back home.

Reviewed by jeannamichel on

4 of 5 stars

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Kana goes through a hard time after a student at her school commits suicide. When she is sent to Japan to live with her relatives, she realizes a few things about herself and others along the way.



I enjoyed Orchards. It was a fast read, mostly because it was a verse novel. I was surprised that a verse novel was able to hold such emotion and feeling into so few words. It was remarkable how the book talked about bullying and suicide and didn't make it seem like too much topics in one. The writing definitely captured my attention. Thompson's flowing stanzas and the tone took me to a different world all together.



The setting was very powerful within the story. The calming set of Kana's family's mikan orange groves helped develop the mood. It truly enveloped the reader into the story that Thompson created so cleverly.



With almost every story that talks about death, it will end with the forgive or forget choice. Orchards did not seem to follow the same standards. The ending was unique. I was content after the last page, without giving too much away, I was satisfied that Kana had learned so much with her relatives. Her character was developed so beautifully that I couldn't help but tear up.



There were so many characters that I really couldn't keep then straight. I would get so immersed in the writing, all the characters' names would get to be too much. The main character, Kana, was the one I was able to connect with the most. She was relatable; she felt like she didn't belong and she worried about making wrong decisions. It was her voice that spoke to me and by the end, it seemed like I, too, had grown up a bit from just reading the novel.

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Reading updates

  • Started reading
  • 2 August, 2011: Finished reading
  • 2 August, 2011: Reviewed