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Richie's Picks: TROUBLE by Gary D. Schmidt,  Clarion, April 2008. ISBN: 
978-0-618-92766-1
 
"When you're lovers in a dangerous time
Sometimes your made to feel as if your love's a  crime
But nothing worth having comes without some fight
Gotta kick at the darkness 'til it bleeds  daylight"
-- Bruce Cockburn
 
" 'It smells like you have a dog in here,' he said.  'A  wet dog.'  His voice 
was tight.  
"It did not seem useful to Henry to lie about  this.  
"Especially since the dog came around the corner of the island  and sat down, 
her head cocked off to the side so that the ear with the large  missing piece 
stuck out.  
"Now Henry's father's face grew tight, too.
" 'Get the dog out of here.' he said.
" 'I just saved her from drowning in the cove.'
" 'That was a mistake.  You don't go looking for Trouble,  Henry...Get away.'
"The last part was directed not at Henry but at the dog, who  had come to 
sniff Henry's father to see if he might be at all  interesting.
" 'Get away,' he said again.  'Black dog, get  away.'
"The dog lifted up a paw.
"And Henry's father kicked her about as hard as a slippered  foot can kick.  
Enough to skid her across the quarried stone floor.  
"She did not cry out.  When she stopped skidding, she  turned on her back, 
put her feet up in the air, and showed her  belly.
" 'Why did you ever bring that dog in here?' said Henry's  father.  'Look at 
her.  Who would want a black dog like that?   Lying there, all beat up.  
Bleeding.  Pieces of her missing.'  He  stopped.  He leaned against the kitchen 
island and put his hands across his  eyes.  'Pieces of her missing,' he said 
again.  His body trembled,  slowly, and then a little bit more, and a little more, 
like a building that is  beginning to feel the earthquake starting under its 
foundations.  
"Then his mouth opened, and though no sound came out, his  silent howls 
filled the kitchen.
"Henry held his father.  Tight.  Very tight.   He felt the black dog come 
back to them.  He felt his father reach down to  scratch behind her chipped ear.  
He saw the dog roll her face with pleasure  against his father's untied robe 
-- and hoped that his father would not see the  pus and blood that she left 
there.
"They stood, the three of them, together in the kitchen, and  two things 
happened.
"First, Black Dog had a home and a name.
"Second, the telephone rang.  It was the  hospital."
 
Set in the 1980s, TROUBLE is the story of Henry Smith, a  middle school 
student growing up on the northern coast of Massachusetts in a  large house which 
has been inhabited by his ancestors for 300 years.   Henry's older brother, 
Franklin, and his sister, Louisa, both attend Henry  Wadsworth Longfellow 
Preparatory High School in Blythbury-by-the-Sea, the town  that has grown up around 
their ancestral home.  Big brother Franklin  is the golden boy, popular and 
athletic, who can do no wrong -- or at  least that is how it seems at first 
glance.
 
As he did with THE WEDNESDAY WARS, my favorite children's  book of 2007, Gary 
Schmidt creates an extraordinary work of historical  fiction that melds zany 
humor with unfathomable, brutal history with  the intricacies of growing up in 
a family.  As with THE WEDNESDAY  WARS, he incorporates classical literature. 
 (In THE WEDNESDAY  WARS Holling Hoodhood was dealing with Shakespeare;  here 
Henry is wrestling with Chaucer.)  Furthermore,  in both books there are 
adult characters who epitomize  prejudice and stupidity in the world.  The 
character in THE WEDNESDAY  WARS whom I most hated was Micky Mantle.  Here, in 
TROUBLE, it is Dr.  Sheringham, principal of Henry Wadsworth  Longfellow Prep. 
 
Trouble comes when Franklin is out running one  evening and he is struck by a 
vehicle, causing his loss of an arm and  critical brain damage, and requiring 
that he be maintained in a comatose  state.  The driver of the vehicle is  
arrested.   We know little about that driver until  a pretrial hearing lays out 
an apparent mystery to be unraveled.  
 
The driver of the vehicle is Chay Chouan. Chay and  his parents are survivors 
of the Cambodian massacres that took place under  the Khmer Rouge; Chay has 
experienced his sister being shot in front of him  and his brother being taken 
by force.  Having barely survived,  and having made their way out of Cambodia 
to the United States, Chay's  family has settled into Merton, a 
formerly-abandoned mill town that has  been revitalized by an influx of Cambodian 
refugees.  
Chay's parents, who  have founded a family masonry and stonework business, 
want the best for  Chay.  And so it is -- we learn during the pretrial hearing 
--  that Chay's parents had gotten him enrolled at Henry Wadsworth Longfellow  
Preparatory High School in Blythbury-by-the-Sea, where Chay has  been 
repeatedly beat up and had his property destroyed by a group  of students led by 
golden boy Franklin Smith.  
 
And -- if we hadn't  previously gotten the drift --  it becomes abundantly 
clear that Chay and Louisa (Henry and Franklin's  sister) have been spending 
time together and are in love.  One might well  conclude that knowledge of this 
relationship has contributed to  Franklin's neanderthal behavior.
 
It is during the pretrial hearing, when all of this is  revealed, that Dr. 
Sheringham's testimony also makes it crystal clear that  the administration has 
fully sanctioned the abuse meted out upon Chay by  Franklin and his cronies.
 
And so readers are provided this information, along with  the fact that Chay 
claims to have fallen asleep behind the wheel,  and that he bandaged 
Franklin's arm with his shirt  before  racing off to get medical assistance.  
(Remember, this is the 1980s.   There are no cell phones for calling 911.)
 
The question is, with knowing the way that Franklin  and his henchmen have 
savagely beaten and abused Chay,  might Chay have purposely or unconsciously 
struck  Franklin? 
 
And how might you feel if you'd had a life like  Chay's and found yourself 
behind the wheel in such  circumstances?     
 
"In the dark, in the light, always imagining her face,  remembering her face 
in the moments before the accident.  Her laugh.   Her easy wave.  How her wave 
had been the first thing about her that told  him all he needed to know. 
"How had his father guessed? 'Remember you were Cambodian  before you were 
American.'  And so he had taken his dog to teach him what  he had to learn.  He 
beat her.  He made him watch.  He starved  her.  He made him watch.  'Learn 
how to be strong,' he said.   Then he took her away.  'She is drowned,' he said 
when he returned.   'Learn to be cold inside.'
"But this is not what he learned.
"He had not realized how much he had missed her  face."
 
Adding TROUBLE to WEDNESDAY WARS and the Prinz Honor and  Newbery Honor book 
LIZZIE BRIGHT AND THE BUCKMINSTER BOY makes for  quite an amazing trifecta for 
Gary Schmidt.
 
 
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
Caldecott  '09






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