Catch & Release
By (Author) Blythe Woolston
Lerner Publishing Group
Carolrhoda Lab
1st January 2012
United States
Children
Fiction
Childrens / Teenage personal and social topics: Physical and mental health condi
Childrens / Teenage personal and social topics: First / new experiences and life
Childrens / Teenage fiction: Sporting stories
Childrens / Teenage general interest: Sports and outdoor recreation
FIC
Commended for Midwest Book Award (MIPA) (Illustration-Graphics) 2011
Hardback
216
Width 141mm, Height 200mm
340g
In two novels, Blythe Woolston has developed a unique and completely recognizeable style that has a strong appeal.
Blythe Woolston's sophomore effort is another unique and provocative examination of human suffering and the meaning of survival. Her protagonists are 18 year-old Polly, the narrator, and Odd, who is a year younger and several degrees more impulsive. Polly and Odd are the only survivors of a MRSA (Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, also known as flesh-eating bacteria) outbreak that killed several people in her town. They did not survive unscathed.
Eighteen-year-old Polly recounts her road trip with Odd, a fellow survivor of the disease that killed five others from their small town, in D'Elegance, his Gramma's old baby-blue Cadillac. Fishing is ostensibly the purpose of their outing, and it symbolically charts the way the two teens process their disabilities. Polly once had a boyfriend and a sense of a normal future, and she now calls her former self 'Polly-That-Was, ' since Bridger has vanished with the disfigurement of her face and loss of an eye from MRSA, or Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus. Odd Estes lost a foot as well as some football buddies, and although the two barely knew each other before, they both now struggle to accommodate their good fortune in surviving and their misfortune of disability. Swearing, booze and weed are along for the journey, which takes them from their hometown somewhere near Yellowstone toward Portland, Ore. Neither teen is particularly articulate, but Polly's first-person narration is as snarky and devastatingly honest as she is. Odd and Polly move from isolation to a mutual connection that helps them deal with their pain. This is not a romance, but a tale of two people thrown together after their world has been turned upside down. Each is unique, vividly complicated and true. Engaging writing and characters lift this above the typical clichd story of disabled teens. Heartbreakingly honest. --Kirkus Reviews
-- "Journal"Polly has physically recovered from the flesh-eating bacteria that attacked her face near the close of her senior year. She has lost one eye and that side of her face is now deeply distorted. Much more brutal than the physical scarring, however, is the fact that the boyfriend with whom she had planned a happily-ever-after future dumped her while she was hospitalized. He just couldn't stand the imperfections that New Polly bore--aesthetically, psychologically, and socially. While in the hospital, however, Polly strikes up an acquaintance with another bacteria survivor, Odd Estes, who lost his foot to the disease and has been outfitted with a robotic prosthesis that he learns to work quite well. In addition to sharing the adjustment to life as bacteria survivors, they both love fishing, and Odd takes Polly on a road trip outfitted with some nearly Kerouacian moments. Woolston's novel offers intriguing characters, contemporary ethical questions, and a story that will have appeal to a wide range of readers. --Booklist
-- "Journal"Polly Furnas, 18, and Odd Estes, 17, both disfigured survivors of a MRSA outbreak, feel rejected in their small Montana town. Both had typical teenage dreams for their futures, only to find themselves unlikely friends bonded by the infection. Odd, who lost a leg, invites Polly on a road trip, promising adventure and lots of fishing. Polly, wanting to get away from her mom and to escape the rejection she feels because of her facial disfigurement, opts to go along. While readers might hope for plenty of action, there is very little, leading to a character-driven novel with no plot. Odd is an unlikable character who eases his pain with medicinal marijuana and carries a gun. Polly and Odd are honest teens with strong opinions. Their interactions are interesting, but some readers will have trouble connecting with either one of them. Mature teens who finish the story will see that this is a novel about acceptance and moving on when life throws a curveball. --School Library Journal
-- "Journal"Polly, a self-described 'monster, ' is disfigured following a staph infection that killed several others in her town. She and Odd, another teen who survived the infection, embark on a road trip that takes them through the Pacific Northwest--and into honest discussions about the nature of disability and the drive to survive. Woolston offers an unusual perspective on healing in this nuanced story.
-- "Journal"This book is a disturbing, yet gripping look at what happens when two teens' lives are forever changed by a lethal case of MRSA (Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus Aureus bacteria) that rips through their small Montana town. Polly Furnas and Odd Estes are the two miracle survivors; now they have to make new plans. Odd invites Polly to go fishing, a trip which becomes a quest where both face their uncertain future. Woolston has created two very genuine and believable characters. It is their raw language and behavior that makes the reader want to stay with them, even as heart-breaking as their lives are. Chapter titles that reference fly-fishing spots, equipment, or lingo provide a peek at what's to come and will appeal to the outdoorsy types. This is a powerful, can't-stop-reading tale of when the life you intended is not the one you have, and that is especially wrenching when you are 17. --Library Media Connection
-- "Journal"When 18-year-old Polly reflects on the idea that what doesn't kill one makes one stronger, she's not thinking about herself. She's referring to a local staph outbreak that killed five people and maimed two, including Polly. 'It ate my eye and part of my cheekbone. It left behind a mess of bumpy pink scars that twists the corner of my mouth up on one side like I'm a half-finished Joker.' Her future plans (and her former boyfriend) now belong to the 'Polly-That-Was, ' and she spends her days watching TV until she hears from fellow survivor Odd Estes, who lost a leg to the infection. A fishing trip in his old Cadillac becomes a road trip to Portland, Ore., as Polly tries to understand the twist of fate that has scarred her inside and out, while she attempts to keep an erratic Odd in check. Morris Award-winner Woolston (The Freak Observer) forces readers to re-evaluate life's random cruelties and the idea of 'survival, ' as she brings her characters to the brink of death, then tosses them back in the water. --Publishers Weekly
-- "Journal"Blythe Woolston works as professional book indexer for academic presses. She is the author of The Freak ObseNerwhich has already won the ABC New Voices Pick award, the Moonbeam Children's Book Award, and the William C. Morris YA Debut Award since its Fall 2010 publication.