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Richie's Picks: RED GLASS by Laura Resau,  Delacorte Press, September 2007, 
ISBN: 0-385-73466-0
 
"Sing a song of America
Once she was a young girl with her heart on fire
Born in the dust of the magic of history
It all goes on yeah the dream goes on."
-- Paul Kantner/Marty Balin "America"
 
 
"Even before the boy appeared, I thought about the people  crossing the 
desert.  I imagined how scrub brush scratched their legs as  they walked at night, 
how the sun dried out their eyes during the day, how their  hearts pounded 
when they threw their bodies to the ground, hiding from la  migra.  I imagined 
them pressing their cheeks against the dust,  thinking about the happy lives 
they would have if only they reached the end of  the desert."
 
If there is a book that will provide adolescents  with some amazing 
big-picture food for thought at a time when our  elected representatives in 
Washington, 
DC are debating what to do in  reaction to the presence of millions of 
undocumented men, women, and  children within our national borders, the amazing and 
heart-stopping RED  GLASS is that book.
 
There is a family unit at the center of RED GLASS which  is unlike anything 
that I -- the suburban Long Island Sixties kid  -- grew up knowing:
 
The narrator is sixteen year-old Sophie, a high school  student, who has 
always thought of herself as a "free-floating one-celled  amoeba," minding her own 
business.  She is an adolescent who is full of  fears, whether it be germs or 
cancer or car accidents.  
 
Sophie's mother grew up in England and ran off at 18 with a  vagrant 
backpacker and discovered "when passing through Tucson on the way to  Mexico"  that 
she was pregnant with Sophie.  She decided to stay in  Tucson through the 
pregnancy and is still there.  Before she was born,  Sophie's dad "got busted for 
dealing acid and took off."
 


Sophie's step father Juan came, illegally, across the  desert from Mexico and 
became legal when he married Sophie's mom nine years  ago.  He sometimes 
allows groups of illegal immigrants who have made it  across the desert to rest 
overnight in the family's fenced-in  backyard.  He always refuses any sort of 
payment.
 
 
Sophie's Great-aunt Dika is from Bosnia.  She had gotten  married to and 
divorced from Sophie's mother's English uncle.  After  Serbian soldiers bombed 
Dika's house, she was discovered in the ruins and  sent to a prisoners' work 
camp.  "After her release, she got political  asylum in Germany and worked in a 
factory there until her visa  expired."  That's when she called her ex-husband's 
niece in America --  Sophie's mother -- and joined their family.     

 
Pablo is a five year-old who was accompanying his parents and  five other 
Mexicans who tried to cross the  desert.  Pablo was discovered -- the lone 
survivor in the  desert -- with Juan's business card in his pocket.  With the  
traumatized boy barely speaking and no relatives claiming him, Pablo  becomes an 
American citizen by default.  Juan and Sophie's mother  choose to become his 
foster parents.  
 
 
"I don't believe in guarded borders and I don't believe in  hate
I don't believe in generals or their stinking torture  states."
-- Bruce Cockburn, "If I Had a  Rocket Launcher" 

 
As a result of Dika's habit of taking Sophie and Pablo  with her and sneaking 
into the pool in the apartment complex down the  street, they get to know Mr. 
Lorenzo -- the pool maintenance man  who becomes Dika's sweetheart -- and Mr. 
Lorenzo's son  Angel.  The pair are legal residents in America, having  been 
refugees who fled violence, torture, and death in  Guatemala.
 
A year after Pablo's arrival, when the young  boy finally begins to speak and 
provides the name of the village from  which he came, relatives are located 
by telephone.  A plan is hatched in  which Mr. Lorenzo and Angel will drive 
Sophie, Dika, and Pablo down to the  little boy's village in southern Mexico so 
that they can visit his  relatives, and Mr. Lorenzo and Angel will continue on 
by bus to Guatemala where  they have some unfinished business.
 
And when things begin to fall apart on their journey, and  she encounters a 
progression of nightmarish situations, it is  Sophie's time to face up to all 
of her fears.
 
"I felt taller and lighter, as if gravity had nearly  disappeared.  As if my 
whole life, I'd let fear cram me into a small box, a  space so tiny I was 
always curled over, my shoulders hunched, my back  bent.  That box had seemed too 
strong to break through, so I hadn't tried  before.  But maybe, all along, the 
box was just flimsy cardboard, and all I  had  to do was stand up, punch 
through the top, and climb  out."
 
RED GLASS is the story of Sophie's pushing out of her  box, as well as a 
story of America today.  And I have to take back  what I said about Sophie's 
family unit being unlike anything I'd grown up  knowing on Long Island.  The fact 
is that I knew kids in my  neighborhood with relatives who had come to America 
with numbers  tattooed on their arms.  I grew up with kids who's parents had 
left Cuba  after taking issue with what was going on there.  I knew a pair  of 
brothers whose father was from Puerto Rico and whose mother was a German  
immigrant.  And I grew up with my own Sicilian grandmother who  had come to this 
land of opportunity with her own family more than one  hundred years ago.  
 
In my recent review of REVOLUTION IS NOT A DINNER PARTY, I  wrote of how I 
might well have been dead if I'd grown up in Maoist China instead  of this land 
of prosperity and constitutional rights.  The argument that  has been put 
forward for centuries -- "Now that we're here, shouldn't  we shut the gate behind 
us?" -- continues to rage on today in D.C., in  the media, and in towns and 
cities across America.  
 
RED GLASS will certainly add fuel to the debate over who and  why and how 
many people desiring to come here should be permitted into America,  and whether 
or not we should be building giant walls along our  borders.
 

Richie  Partington, MLIS
Richie's Picks http://richiespicks.com
Moderator,  http://groups.yahoo.com/group/middle_school_lit/
BudNotBuddy@aol.com
http://www.myspace.com/richiespicks







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