The Book of Jude
By (Author) Kimberly Burton Heuston
Front Street Inc
Front Street Inc
1st April 2008
United States
Children
Fiction
Childrens / Teenage fiction: Historical fiction
Childrens / Teenage personal and social topics: Disability, impairments and spec
FIC
Hardback
217
381g
A brilliant young woman's fight against a debilitating psychological illness is set against the historical events of the Prague Spring and the anti-Soviet struggles in Czechoslovakia. When Jude's mother gets a fellowship to go to Prague to study, Jude's world is thrown into chaos. The teenage girl feels threatened and isolated. It turns out her whole family is going, but still Jude feels adrift. When she arrives in Prague and discovers that their life in the embassy compound is closely circumscribed by rules and regulations and that they are closely watched at all times, she begins to suffer even more. Desperate to break out of the constraints imposed on her and her family, Jude sneaks out one night only to encounter a security crackdown on students and dissenters. Although she makes it home safely, her consciousness continues to deteriorate as she fluctuates in and out of rationality. Only when Jude steals a friend's car and drives into the countryside does the true seriousness of her condition become apparent to her family. Then the long road to recovery begins.
"Heuston constructs a solid cast and setting, against which her protagonist's breakdown proceeds in a convincing way. Jude's Mormon faith is a strong subsidiary element here, as well." --Booklist
"Will resonate with readers, and the wise philosophy of living a life in the midst of loss and oppression, offered by an elderly friend, is worth the price of admission." --Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books
Kimberley Heuston is a graduate of the Vermont College MFA Program in Writing for Children and Young Adults. A historian by training, she teaches school in Salt Lake City. She is also the author of "The Shakeress," the paperback version of which is on the Spring 2008 list.