A review by backonthealex
Better to Wish by Ann M. Martin

4.0

In 2022, Abby Nicols is 100 years old. and as she says in the Prologue, when you are as old as she is, you have the pleasure of looking over your life and revisiting different days. And that is exactly what Abby does, being in August 1930 when she is eight years old and ending in February 1945, when she is 22 years old.

In between, the reader gets to know quiet intelligent Abby, her younger impetuous, more out spoken sister Rose, her depressed, weak willed Mama, Nel, still grieving for the two babies that didn't survive rather than focusing on her two living daughters, and her controlling, bigoted Pop, Luther, a carpenter.

As the story begins, the depression has already begun to affect people's lives. Money is scarce and work even scarcer, though Pop goes to work every day. Eventually, as city people begin to buy houses in the area to use as summer homes, Pop's business grows and soon there is money enough, but there is also sadness and heartbreak enough.

Mama has another baby, a boy named Fred, but he has severe undefined developmental issues. Fred proves to be almost an unbearable embarrassment to Pop that one day he has him institutionalized behind the family's back. Mama's depression gets worse and not even the birth of a healthy little girl named Adele helps her.

Though Rose is the sassy sister, the one you might think is or will be the rebel in the family, it is actually quiet Abby who continues to be friends with Orrin despite her father's demand that she have nothing to do with him because Pop had decided his parent are lazy French Canadian, Catholics who refuse to work. And Orrin isn't the only friend who would not meet her Pop's approval.

Better to Wish is very much like Abby: it quietly goes along revealing meaningful episodes in her life that ultimately bring Abby to the decisions she makes in 1945. Along the way, Abby experiences her share of happiness and unhappiness, fulfilment and disappointment, kindness and cruelty, life and death.

Better to Wish is a nice historical fiction novel, written in the same vein as the American Girl books, but for a slightly older reader and with a much darker side. In the American Girl books, times may be hard, but the main character's family isn't. They are loving, kind and supportive. Here, times are hard and life at home is often cold, disagreeable and unsympathetic. And yet, I found myself so totally drawn into this compelling, coming of age story.

The novel is written episodically, with about two or three intense entries per year, done to resemble the reminiscences of the 100 year old Abby. These skillfully presented kaleidoscopic bits of Abby's life come together to give the reader a clear picture and understand of growing up in the clutches of the depression.

Better to Wish is the first book in a series of four about one girl in succeeding generations within a family. As author Ann M. Martin explained in Time for Kids "the books are about the highs and lows that each girl faces as she grows up during a different period of history." And if the name Ann M. Martin sounds familiar, you probably remember her from her other series called The Baby-Sitters Club.

The next book, The Long Way Home, will be about Abby's daughter Dana and is due out in November 2013. And I can't wait to read it.

This book is recommended for readers age 9+
This book was obtained from the publisher

The review was originally published at Randomly Reading