| A Review of: After Sylvia by Antony Di NardoPackaged as a sequel to the award-winning The Secret Life of Owen
Skye, Alan Cumyn's new book for children, After Sylvia, is likewise
a daily parade of mishaps, unfortunate events and those house-bound
adventures of boyhood that befall Owen Skye. The crystal radio set
catches fire, he masters the art of one-handed egg cracking by,
well, breaking a lot of eggs, and with the help of his two brothers
he accidentally crashes an old boat into the side of his father's
station wagon. He's funny, but not because he wants to be; Owen has
that sad clown aura about him. However, he can shake it off when
he's after something. And, as emphasized by the double meaning of
the book's title, he's after Sylvia-the same Sylvia with whom he
fell in love in the first book, but who has since moved away.
Owen Skye is of indeterminate age. I'd give him nine or ten. He
celebrates a birthday at the end of the book, but the thirty-eight
candles on the cake do little to reveal his age. He's in elementary
school, in a portable classroom (we know that for sure), and on the
first day of the school year Owen's greatest concern is mastering
the multiplication code that he believes is annually revised by
ruthless, unionized teachers. From that first day on to when he
eventually becomes class president, a position he earns because of
his loyalty and steadfastness, we encounter a boy who is trying to
make sense of his romp through childhood. Owen is inquisitive,
thoughtful, sensitive and, most of all, in love.
Owen Skye pines for Sylvia Tull. She and her parents have moved to
the county town of Elgin, miles away from where Owen lives and goes
to school. They were classmates once and she made Owen blush and
fall over his feet. When she left, he gave her a copper ring as a
sign of his affection for her, hoping that she would never forget
him. Now, whenever he thinks of Sylvia he is disarmed. At first,
he wonders if he'll ever make it through the school year without
having her next to him in class. Later he fears that his memory of
her is fading. He even begins to confuse Sylvia's face with that
of his teacher's.
Owen, candid and sincere in a way only a ten-year-old can be, has
charmed Miss Glendon. She's a first-year teacher and very vulnerable.
She nominates him for class president, but as a result of a hilarious
coincidence whereby he is trumped by a classmate with a similar
election platform, Owen settles for vice-president. An unlikely
school trip to Japan is planned and the class embarks upon a
fundraising campaign to sell tractor calendars, a failed undertaking.
However, door-to-door sales bring Owen to Elgin, where he finally
meets Sylvia again. Spring approaches and Owen invites her to his
birthday party. His brothers' teasing about his feelings for Sylvia
is unrelenting and he is forced to listen to his father's circumspect
sermon on falling in love. "When you're young and have no
ballast, love can hit you like a wave and knock you straight into
tomorrow," he tells Owen. The party, of course, is not without
its share of the misadventures and accidents that seem to follow
Owen wherever he goes.
Alan Cumyn hits a high note in his portrayal of Owen. His language
and style are confident, replete with a wonderful sense of humour
that must come with being a big kid himself. He captures the essence
of boyhood when a child is allowed to wander and wonder, to err and
to learn with the gentlest of guidance. Owen Skye has a big heart,
big enough to contain any reader. It's especially comforting to
know that pre-teens will read this story and meet a character who
is, without pandering to the popular consensus or kowtowing to adult
authority, loveable, thoughtful, brave and wise. And they will
recognize him as their peer.
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