
Module 7: Realistic Fiction for Young Adults
3 Willows: The Sisterhood Grows by Ann Brashares
Brashares, A. (2009). 3 Willows: the sisterhood grows. New York: RandomHouse Children's Books.
Summary
3 Willows is about three 13 year old girls who used to be best friends, but have grown apart in the past few years. As they go their separate ways the summer before ninth grade, they all learn about themselves and grow to realize the value of each others friendship. The problems each of the girls face are typical of girls that age: learning to fit in, discovering what really matters to each of them, learning how to deal with challenges and figuring out what makes a true friend. Poignant and real, this book depicts the growth and realization that takes place at this time in life for many girls.
My Thoughts
The friendship and relationships between these three girls is so real and genuine. The struggles each of the girls' face are things that many readers would deal with and this book does an excellent job showing how true friendship can help individuals. The rich characterization and development of individual personalities helps the reader to understand and relate to each of the girls. Leaving middle school and entering high school is often a time of change and growth for many people and this book does a great job portraying that. The changing friendship between the girls is something that many people have experienced and Brashares does a fantastic job creating a real and believable relationship between the three girls. In terms of using in a library setting, this could be a good addition to a presentation on friendship, or even summer vacation.
Review
A new Sisterhood is here! Ann Brashares brings us another delightful story of friendships. Polly, Jo, and Ama, friends since kindergarten, are facing the summer before their first year of high school. They have shared many things together, but this summer they are off to new adventures on their own. Ama, who hates the outdoors and loves libraries, has received a scholarship to a wilderness adventure camp. Jo is spending the summer at the beach house with her mom and learns that her parents are separating. Polly is left behind and missing her friends, so she convinces her Mom to send her to modeling school. Polly decides that she must lose weight and is on the verge of becoming anorexic, when her single mom is hospitalized for alcoholism. In the midst of all these difficulties, the three friends come back together and are able to help each other while celebrating their friendship once again. This reviewer hopes that this is the beginning of a new Sisterhood series, as will the girls who will be lining up to read this latest by Ann Brashares. Highly Recommended. Morris, B. Library Media Connection, 2009.
The original Sisterhood is now the stuff of legend; in this fast-paced, readable novel, the story moves on to a new circle of friends, one with a strong past but a shaky present. Ama, Polly, and Jo sealed their friendship in third grade by planting three tiny willow trees together; but by their last year of middle school, the girls have drifted apart. The start of summer finds them awkwardly returning all the items they’d once borrowed, until “what little they’d still had of each other they didn’t have anymore.” As in the original series, the novel traces a single summer in which each girl experiences her own set of challenges. Bookworm Ama winds up on a wilderness trip, horrified by the prospect of hiking boots and no hair products; Polly, who has outwardly changed least since grade school, develops a dangerous obsession with becoming a model; status-conscious Jo takes a job at a beachside restaurant with the cool high school girls and has a fling with a gorgeous boy that ends in hurt and humiliation. Each girl finds herself longing for the other two and a return to their friendship. The characters are well developed, and their struggles (including more serious family issues of divorce and alcoholism) feel real. The end-of-summer resolution is a satisfying formula for middle-school readers, and a closing visit to the flourishing willow trees promises more to come. Adams, L. Horn Book Magazine, 2009.
The original Sisterhood is now the stuff of legend; in this fast-paced, readable novel, the story moves on to a new circle of friends, one with a strong past but a shaky present. Ama, Polly, and Jo sealed their friendship in third grade by planting three tiny willow trees together; but by their last year of middle school, the girls have drifted apart. The start of summer finds them awkwardly returning all the items they’d once borrowed, until “what little they’d still had of each other they didn’t have anymore.” As in the original series, the novel traces a single summer in which each girl experiences her own set of challenges. Bookworm Ama winds up on a wilderness trip, horrified by the prospect of hiking boots and no hair products; Polly, who has outwardly changed least since grade school, develops a dangerous obsession with becoming a model; status-conscious Jo takes a job at a beachside restaurant with the cool high school girls and has a fling with a gorgeous boy that ends in hurt and humiliation. Each girl finds herself longing for the other two and a return to their friendship. The characters are well developed, and their struggles (including more serious family issues of divorce and alcoholism) feel real. The end-of-summer resolution is a satisfying formula for middle-school readers, and a closing visit to the flourishing willow trees promises more to come. Adams, L. Horn Book Magazine, 2009.