Rosoff, Meg. 2004. HOW I LIVE NOW. New York, New York: Random House.
ISBN 0385746776
PLOT SUMMARY
Daisy, the narrator of the story, is a 15 year old girl from New York who goes to London, England to visit her aunt and four cousins (Osbert, the eldest, Isaac and Edmond twins, and Piper, the youngest and only girl) and get away from her widowed father and pregnant girlfriend. Instantly upon arriving she feels a connection with her 14 year old cousin Edmond and they are able to read each other's minds. A few days later her aunt, Aunt Penn, leaves to attend a conference in Oslo when a bomb goes off in London which prevents her from returning home. At first the children don't mind because they enjoy not having any adults around. This also allows the relationship between Daisy and Edmond to blossom which turns into incest and sex on a regular, almost daily, sometimes more than once a day, basis.
Eventually war breaks out and the army comes and takes over their house to use in the war effort. Osbert enlists with the Army, Isaac and Edmond are sent off to live in another town, and Daisy and Piper and their dog Jet are sent to live in another town in the opposite direction of their home and the others to live with an army major (Major McEvoy) and his family. The government in order to keep everyone in their homes and not out asking questions or comparing notes tell the country that there is a smallpox epidemic. Daisy and Piper decide that they want to be useful so they tell Major McEvoy that they can train their dog Jett through a whistle that Piper produces. She becomes very useful to the army while Daisy learns to shoot a gun and then eventually along with several others become the crop gatherers. Daisy at one point tells the reader "I spent some of my endless hours of leisure learning to shoot a gun, which I thought might come in handy someday, if not in the war then back on the streets of New York."
One night while coming home from a long day's work one of the workers named Joe "loses" it and starts yelling obscenities at a guard. The guard very nonchalantly shoots him in the head. As Major McEvoy gets out to assist him he too is shot and left for dead. The truck continues on the McEvoy's farm where Daisy, Piper, Mrs. McEvoy, and her youngest son decide it is no longer safe to stay there after learning that the enemy army is going from home to home and shooting anyone that they do not like. In the confusion and haste their dog Jet gets left behind. They travel to a nearby farm where other families are staying in a barn with many soliders.
After staying there for awhile Daisy realizes that it is no longer safe to stay there and that she made a promise to Piper to reunite her with her family. She discusses her plan with one of the soliders she trusts, Baz, and after formulating her plan she and Piper set off in the dead of night. "And as we walked along and the noises of guns got to sound like little pops I told her about knowing where Isaac and Edmond were staying and having a map and talking to Baz about my plan and pumping every solider in the barn for clues on how to survive in the wild." They travel by night and sleep/hide during the day, eating the few provisions that Baz prepared for them and eating edible plants they find. They finally reach the river that runs behind Piper's family farm and realize that they are getting closer to home.
The first farm they come to has a pack of wolves devouring seventeen human bodies. Daisy makes a futile attempt to try and shoo them away but realizes eventually that they ignore her and decides it is best to move on. They finally reach Piper's farm and retreat to the lambing barn since it is secluded and does not appear to have been disturbed. Shortly there after they hear a noise and suddenly Jet appears out of nowhere. Daisy and Piper eventually make their way to the farmhouse to check it out and end up taking baths and finding some of their own clothes to put on. One day when they are in the farmhouse the phone rings and Daisy answers it not recognizing the voice on the other end at first. The story ends here and then continues as chapter one of the epilogue.
The epilogue opens with Daisy having spent some time in a mental hospital and upon release decides to live by herself instead of with her father and his new family. One day a letter arrives from Piper and after Daisy musters up the courage to open it she realizes that her home and famiy are in England. Once arriving there she catches up on what has been happening with the others since they last spoke and learns that Aunt Penn died shortly after reaching Oslo while attempting to return to the farm and the children. The others appear to be fine except for Edmond who is withdrawn and does not speak verbally or telepathically. Through Daisy's determination and patience she breaks through to Edmond and realizes that this is where she belongs and will live the rest of her life.
CRITICAL ANALYSIS
HOW I LIVE NOW won the Michael Printz Award in 2005. The Michael Printz award is given annually starting in 2000 to the author that writes the best quality book for young adults that year. For more information on the Michael Printz Award check out this website http://www.ala.org/ala/yalsa/booklistsawards/printzaward/Printz.cfm.
This novel is contemporary realistic fiction. There are several criteria that determine if this type of genre is well written or not. One of the elements that must be evident in the story is characterization which must contain believable characters that act like real people, realism that is factual, situational, emotional, and social, and must avoid the typical stereotyping of males and females. Another requirement is that the plot must be credible, have events that are true-to-life, and avoid coincidence and pat endings, but have hopeful, if not a happy resolution. The setting must be believable and contemporary. And finally, the theme must include topics that are timely and relevant, have a personal resonance for the young adult reader, and avoid didacticism, the story must not be overpowered by the theme.
The characters in HOW I LIVE NOW are indeed believable and they deal with situations that young adults of today are faced with. For example, Daisy and Edmond act on their impulses instead of thinking things through (using their brains instead of their "needs") when they commit incest. An example of how these two were acting on their impulses are "two people who were too young and too related could start kissing without anything or anyone making us stop. There were no parents, no teachers, no schedules. There was nowhere to go or nothing to do that would remind us that this sort of thing didn't happen in the Real World. ....For a while Edmond and I pretended that what was happening between us was totally reversible." Many teens of today either think about having this type of relationship or are in this type of relationship and have convinced themselves that there is nothing wrong with it, have "blocked out" the real world that include the people who would tell them that this is not a good situation to be in , and think that the relationship is forever and if it is not that they can undo what they have done.
Rosoff shows her skill when it comes to the plot being credible, having events that are true-to-life, and avoiding coincidence and pat endings, but instead having a hopeful, if not a happy ending. Daisy tells the reader at the end of the story, "I know all about those conditions, only this time they're outside of me. And anyway, fighting back is whiat I've discovered I do best. After all this time, I know exactly where I belong. Here. With Edmond. And that's how I live now."
In a contemporary realistic fiction novel the setting must be believable and contemporary. If the reader has done any previous exposure to what life is like during war times then they can see with a few updates that this could be the modern version of World War II. If the reader has not read anything previously about wars they can conceptualize that the ways things were in the book could indeed really happen. "The kitchen was the worst and I guess even army guys like to spend lots of time in the kitchen and the big table was covered with heaps of paper. There were maps drawn on the wall and no food except what I'd found in the pantry that first day Piper and I went to check the barn next door there was no sign of the chickens or sheep or any other animals..."
Finally, Rosoff's theme includes topics that are timely and relevant, have a personal resonance for the young adult reader, and avoid didacticism, the story is not overpowered by the theme. When Daisy is speaking about her giving up the hunger strike that she began in New York she states, "...I wouldn't be good old Daisy if I didn't get my appetite back just when everyone else in the world was learning how to starve, and partly the idea of wanting to be thin in a world full of people dying from lack of food struck even me as stupid."
REVIEW EXCERPT
School Library Journal:"This Printz award winner is a good choice for book discussions as it considers the disruption of war both physically and emotionally and should be on every high school and public library shelf."
Some other books that deal with issues that confront young adults are:
Hautman, Pete. GODLESS. ISBN 1416908161
Marchetta, Melina. SAVING FRANCESCA. ISBN 0375829822
Rosoff, Meg. JUST IN CASE. ISBN 0385746784
Lynch, Chris. INEXCUSABLE. ISBN 1416939725
The other Printz Award and Honor books since 2000 until the posting of this review are:
2007
Winner:
Yang, Gene Luen. AMERICAN BORN CHINESE. ISBN 1596433736
Honor Books:
Anderson, M. T. THE ASTONISHING LIFE OF OCTAVIAN NOTHING, TRAITOR TO THE NATION; v. 1: THE POX PARTY. ISBN 0763624020
Green, John. AN ABUNDANCE OF KATHERINES. ISBN 0525476881
Hartnett, Sonya. SURRENDER. ISBN 0763634239
Zusak, Markus. THE BOOK THIEF. ISBN 0375842209
2006
Winner:
Green, John. LOOKING FOR ALASKA. ISBN 0525475060
Honor Books:
Lanagan, Margo. BLACK JUICE. ISBN 0060743921
Zusak, Markus. I AM THE MESSENGER. ISBN 0375836675
Partridge, Elizabeth. JOHN LENNON: ALL I WANT IS THE TRUTH, A PHOTOGRAPHIC BIOGRAPHY. ISBN 0670059544
Nelson, Marilyn. A WREATH FOR EMMETT TILL. ISBN 0618397523
2005
Winner:
Rosoff, Meg. HOW I LIVE NOW. ISBN 0385746776
Honor Books:
Oppel, Kenneth. AIRBORN. ISBN 0060531800
Stratton, Allan. CHANDA'S SECRETS. ISBN 1550378341
Schmidt, Gary D. LIZZIE BRIGHT AND THE BUCKMINSTER BOY. ISBN 0553494953
2004
Winner:
Johnson, Angela. THE FIRST PART LAST. ISBN 0689849230
Honor Books:
Donnelly, Jennifer. A NORTHERN LIGHT. ISBN 0152053107
Frost, Helen. KEESHA'S HOUSE. ISBN 0374400121
Going, K. L. FAT KID RULES THE WORLD. ISBN 0142402087
Mackler, Carolyn. THE EARTH, MY BUTT, AND OTHER BIG ROUND THINGS. ISBN 1844282937
2003
Winner:
Chambers, Aidan. POSTCARDS FROM NO MAN'S LAND. ISBN 1862302847
Honor Books:
Farmer, Nancy. THE HOUSE OF THE SCORPION. ISBN 0689852231
Freymann-Weyr, Garret. MY HEARTBEAT. ISBN 0618141812
Gantos, Jack. HOLE IN MY LIFE. ISBN 0099475871
2002
Winner:
Na, An. A STEP FROM HEAVEN. ISBN 060627412X
Honor Books:
Dickinson, Peter. THE ROPEMAKER. ISBN 0385730632
Abrams, Jan Greenberg. HEART TO HEART: NEW POEMS INSPIRED BY TWENIETH-CENTURY AMERICAN ART. ISBN 0810943867
Lynch, Chris. FREEWILL. ISBN 0747562660
Wolff, Virginia Euwer. TRUE BELIEVER. ISBN 0571207022
2001
Winner:
Almond, David. KIT'S WILDERNESS. ISBN 0340883502
Honor Books:
Coman, Carolyn. MANY STONES. ISBN 0330399179
Plum-Ucci, Carol. THE BODY OF CHRISTOPHER CREED. ISBN 0606225692
Rennison, Louise. ANGUS, THONGS, AND FULL FRONTAL SNOGGING: CONFESSIONS OF GEORGIA NICOLSON. ISBN 0060521848
Trueman, Terry. STUCK IN NEUTRAL. ISBN 0064472132
2000
Winner:
Myers, Walter Dean. MONSTER. ISBN 0064407314
Honor Books:
Almond, David. SKILLIG. ISBN 0440229081
Anderson, Laurie Halse. SPEAK. ISBN 0844672920
Wittlinger, Ellen. HARD LOVE. ISBN 0689872577
Other ways to connect and extend the book:
1)Have students create a database in which after they have read several of the above mentioned books they collect and organize facts comparing information for patterns. This would probably work best if the students input the data at the conclusion of each book instead of waiting until after they read two or more in order to make sure that the information is fresh in their memories.
2)Have the students create new art to advertise the book and add a compelling blurb to draw readers in.
3)Have the students design a postage stamp with a three paragraph (or more if preferred) essay describing why the subject was important enough to deserve a commemorative stamp.
4)Have the students create a playable game based upon the book and then host a game time in which their fellow classmates actually play the game.