Skip to main content

SEE YOU AT HARRY’S by Jo Knowles


copyright date: May 2012
primarily marketed for: middle school (age 10 and up)

Everything you have heard about this book is true. 

It is one of those books that will find its way into your heart and nestle in for a good long while.

See You at Harry’s by Jo Knowles is filled with endearing characters far beyond the protagonist: twelve-year-old Fern.  Fern’s family is made up of a (much) younger brother Charlie, (who only pronounces his /r/ sound when calling Fern’s name), an older brother Holden (who is struggling with his own identity), an older sister Sara (who wears her hair in dreadlocks and torments her siblings as much as she adores them), a mother (who is juggling attending to her husband’s passion for the family business and a house full of children with varying needs), and a father (whose love of his restaurant often comes at the cost of family embarrassment).  The story largely takes place at Harry’s, the family restaurant, which hosts a cast of characters each with their own charm. 

Fern’s story is one of many layers.  She is struggling to find her place in her family, at her new middle/high school, and amongst her best friends.  Fern seems to take care of others quite often.  In fact, that was her mother’s hope for her by naming her Fern after the character in Charlotte’s Web by E.B. White, and Fern is always trying to live up to her name.

The relationships between characters are so well drawn, I almost want Jo Knowles to meet my family and write them into her books so I can know them on paper like I know Fern’s family.  Somehow she makes these characters with real struggles and real emotions likeable, despite their flaws. 

Through the many layers in the story, Knowles addresses many big issues with grace.  Fern faces the issue of bullying head on—even by a grown-up, and yet she is also surrounded by loads of love and support.  This is the first book that tackles the issue of sexual identity without becoming about that or going over the top, while still not shying away.  When the family experiences unthinkable loss, Knowles pulls readers in so we too experience the loss at the same time we want to reach in the book and rescue the family right out of the truth of their story.  Knowles also has a way of suggesting edgy language, without going there.  It is simply brilliantly written. 

See You at Harry’s is the kind of book that makes me want to run right out and find all of Jo Knowles’s other books.  But I just can’t imagine a better book than this one.

Reading Threads:

Comments

  1. It is truly wonderful, I agree. I like this Christy: "Knowles pulls readers in so we too experience the loss at the same time we want to reach in the book and rescue the family right out of the truth of their story." Exactly! Thanks for reminding me how good the writing is.

    ReplyDelete
  2. C-

    Your review is spot on. Just like you said, "I almost want Jo Knowles to meet my family and write them into her books so I can know them on paper like I know Fern’s family." I loved this book SO much that I'm going to have to buy 2 more copies. One to put in the hands of my adult friends, one to put in the hands of my students, and one to keep selfishly for myself so I can re-read it for inspiration. This is a great year for realistic YA fiction! Wonder, See You At Harry's, One for the Murphy's, and Code Name Verity...I'm excited to see what comes next!

    J

    ReplyDelete
  3. AMAZING!!! LOVED!!! I am so glad that you selected it for review. I can't wait to start talking it at school.

    ReplyDelete
  4. I loved this book! it showed me hoe much I should say I love you more.

    ~A

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

TAKE WHAT YOU CAN CARRY by Kevin C. Pyle

copyright date: March 2012 primarily marketed for: young adults (12 and up) Despite the fact that the teacher in me sees so many lesson possibilities in Kevin C. Pyle’s graphic novel Take What You Can Carry , you should read it simply for the grace of its stories.   The artwork is as striking as the stories it tells.   Using artwork in two different colors and styles, Pyle tells the stories of two teenage boys living years and miles apart.   And yet, he communicates the universality in their experiences.   One boy is a Japanese American forced to move into an internment camp during WWII.   His family struggles to maintain their dignity and sense of peace under unbearable conditions. The other is a rebellious boy with an attitude whose reckless behavior causes him to wind up in trouble with the law.   To make amends, he finds himself completing community service hours in the most unlikely place.   I found my...

ALL THESE THINGS I’VE DONE by Gabrielle Zevin

copyright date: September 2011 primarily marketed for: young adults (8 th grade and up) I wish I would’ve known this was the beginning of a series before I started this book.   Then again, I might never have picked it up if I thought I might be committing to multiple books… At any rate, this is not a story I will be sad to return to this fall when the sequel is released.   Anya’s story takes place in New York City, in the future.   Around the time you will be old enough to be grandparents. This is a sort of post-apocalyptic, dystopian kind of book in a mild way.   Basically, the United States has self-destructed, and yet life seems to go surprisingly similar to the way we live nowadays.   Except that water and paper are costly and hard to come by.   Chocolate is prohibited.   Caffeine is an illegal drug.   Which is all to say that the setting alone is intriguing. Add to that setting, the fact that Anya is the oldest daughter of the ...

CROSSING STONES by Helen Frost

copyright date: 2009 primarily marketed for: middle school and up Helen Frost is one of my favorite authors.   I have adored every book I’ve read by her.   In fact, the copies of some of her books in our school library have disappeared because I am apparently not the only one who appreciates her work.   Her stories, told in poetic verse, are always moving and then I am always amazed to discover there is a specific format she follows when writing the poetry for each book.   You might remember her book Diamond Willow , which was a recent Caudill nominee.   Crossing Stones is the story of four teenagers during World War I (two sets of brothers and sisters who are neighbors).   The boys, Frank and Ollie, end up going off to fight in the war, while the girls, Muriel and Emma, each face their own struggles at home.   The voices of all four characters are threaded throughout the book with grace.   The poetry alternates viewpoints and includes...