
About This Book:
This YA debut speaks to the continued interest in the teen culture of the 1950s—Elvis Presley, teenage rebellion—with a young girl embarking on adventure and music, ultimately uncovering family secrets.
Being fourteen is especially hard in 1956, when the world is changing around you. Honor student Paula Levy was born into a family of historical victims: her mother’s youth was lost in the Depression and her father’s was destroyed in the Holocaust, an as-yet-unnamed event about which no one speaks. But Paula has heard the new music taking hold of the nation—rock and roll—and it has given her hope. And she has two friends to get her through life’s ups and downs: Holden Caulfield, hero of Catcher in the Rye, who shares her view of the world, and Barbara, a “cool” girl in her high school who unexpectedly shares Paula’s view of Holden.
Paula’s mother is not a fan of Barbara, and she prohibits her daughter from associating with her. Paula manages to get around her mother’s rule and see Barbara anyway—but when Paula asks the wrong questions about her father’s past and Barbara is caught with her “boyfriend,” their private world of Holden, rock, and Elvis Presley crumbles. Angry with the adults in their lives, the two girls run away to find Barbara’s real father, a jazz musician. Disappointingly, he does not live in a mansion or socialize with Elvis—but Paula and Barbara may find something even better.
*Review Contributed by Karen Yingling, Staff Reviewer*
Paula’s not a bad kid. She does well in school. She wears the dweeby clothes her mother buys for her, even though she has (shocked gasp!) quit buttoning the top button of her blouses and has been turning the collar up! She’ understandably miffed with Margaret, who is rather self righteous, especially when her mother makes her stay with Margaret’s family for ten days while the mother is in Cleveland helping the aunt with a new baby. Paula’s father couldn’t possibly take care of her. The running away plans are fascinating, and I imagine that there were a lot of kids during the 1950s who did run away. Remember, Paula’s mother grew up at a time where, if families couldn’t take care of their children, children were often left to fend for themselves. Paula did have a bit of understanding that the plan wasn’t the best one, which was good to see.
There are plenty of cultural touchpoints; there would have been many parents who survived the Holocaust, and they wouldn’t necessarily have talked about what they lost. I could have used a few more tiny historical details, but there were enough, and Mrs. Levy’s solid middle class presence and values were perfect.
I’d love to see more books about teens and tweens in the 1950s; I would have expected a lot in the 1970s or 80s as nostalgic pieces, but there never were very many. For more glimpses at this era of bobby socks and Poodle skirts, pick up Frazier’s Mighty Inside, Walsh’s Red Scare: A Graphic Novel, Crowder’s Mazie, or Elliott’s Suspect Red.
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