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Meet the Austins by Madeleine L'Engle
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Genre: Realistic Fiction
Age Appropriateness: 5-6th
Summary: Vicky is one of four siblings and finds herself continually learning about family, dedication, and unconditional love. The book begins with death which is why Madeleine had a hard time getting it published. The book is about a family working together and being incredibly flexible to help out a person in need. The book is filled with many adventures such as bike rides resulting in a hospital stay, a trip to the beach, and ice storms. ( )
  bknight07 | Nov 2, 2009 |
Delightful! I plan to give this book to a couple of kids I know and will read more in the 5-book series. ( )
  mthelibrarian | Jun 26, 2009 |
I have a 17-year-old and this has still given me some great parenting tips! ( )
  weebaby | May 6, 2009 |
This is a good example of realistic fiction. The characters and their interactions are very real and the circumstances (Maggy's parents dying) are unfortunately real.. L'Engle even said that the characters are based on her own family. Media: N/A ( )
  tshrum06 | Feb 4, 2009 |
I LOVED this book. I read the 24 days before Christmas to my kids and they and I really liked it. We were so excited to find another book about the characters that we had grown to love. I read this book to my girls when they were pretty young, and there were times when I felt surprised that they liked it so much because there was a serious, slower element to it, but the characters were so well developed that we simply enjoyed spending time with them. ( )
  StephJoan | Jan 26, 2009 |
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Epigraph
Dedication
To my family
First words
It started out to be a nice, normal, noisy evening.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
Disambiguation notice
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Wikipedia in English (4)

File:Meetaustinsfsg.jpg

Madeleine L'Engle

Meet the Austins

Vicky Austin

Book description

Amazon.com (ISBN 044095777X, Mass Market Paperback)

Reading award-winning author Madeleine L'Engle's Meet the Austins is like taking a vacation with the warm, compassionate Austins--an extraordinary family who takes a little girl named Maggy Hamilton under its wing when her father is killed in a plane accident. Adjusting to a new household member is not easy, as the 12-year-old narrator, Vicky, will testify. Maggy is spoiled, "ubiquitous," laughs in a "horrid, screechy way," and appears to be a child of an entirely different species from the thoughtful, intelligent, kind, yet not cloyingly so, Austin kids. Still, Vicky and her other siblings (Rob, Suzy, and John) grit their collective teeth and struggle to understand her, which becomes easier and easier as the loving family seems to rub off on the newly orphaned Maggy.

The Austins are beyond question a charming family, but their path is by no means rock-free: Vicky sneaks off to a friend's house and severely injures herself in a bike accident, they all get the measles, John is beat up after his guest sermon in church, and they almost lose little Rob. Despite ordinary family setbacks, there's no use pretending this is a run-of-the-mill family. When Vicky is sick, her older brother, John, comes into her room and soothes her with a discussion of the solar system, our atomic composition, and the relativity of size. Family dinner-table talk includes the ethics of meat eating, and a chat with Grandfather ends up with a discussion of whether Einstein believed in God. As in all of L'Engle's novels, she asks the big questions: What is the meaning of life, and how does death fit into that? Are there different kinds of intelligence? What happens when you remove a screw from a radiator? This strangely comforting novel, first published in 1960, is an ALA Notable Book, and was followed by four other books featuring the Austin Family: The Moon by Night, The Young Unicorns, A Ring of Endless Light (a Newbery Honor Book), and Troubling a Star. (Ages 9 to 12) --Karin Snelson

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:08 -0400)

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