Book Descriptions
for Piggy by Mireille Geus and Nancy Forest-Flier
From Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC)
“Dizzy” Lizzy Bekell is misunderstood by her peers. Autistic, the twelve-year-old whiles away hours at the bus stop, watching the neighborhood boys play together but unable, and unwelcome, to join them. Lizzy’s careful routines at home with her mother and at her special school are interrupted when a new girl moves to town and forcefully befriends her. Margaret is brash and bold. Her fierceness alarms and awes Lizzy, who is pleased to have a friend but unsure of how to handle Margaret’s moodiness. The intense and manipulative relationship emanates uncomfortable foreshadowing. Lizzy’s uneasiness grows as Margaret, negatively nicknamed “Piggy,” hatches a retaliation plan against the neighborhood bullies. Lizzy’s voice provides powerful narration as she recounts the disastrous scenario to police investigators. The shifting from past to present closely parallels Lizzy’s own transitions between internal and external realities. This quiet novel resonates with realistic conflict. The drama builds effectively, but the final blow arrives after the travesty has unraveled. (Ages 11–14)
CCBC Choices 2009. © Cooperative Children's Book Center, Univ. of Wisconsin - Madison, 2009. Used with permission.
From the Publisher
One day, while leaning against her street lamp, she meets a new girl a fat blond girl who seems perfectly capable of standing up to the taunts of the neighborhood boys playing nearby. The girls name is Abigail, but her nickname is Pig. She immediately sees in Lizzy an easy mark, someone so trusting and thirsty for friendship that she can be made to do Pigs bidding. At the same time Pig, herself a lonely, friendless girl, hopes that Lizzy will be her friend. And this creates the basic dynamic of the story: how far can Lizzy allow herself to be manipulated by Pig before she stands up to her no easy thing and says no?
Publisher description retrieved from Google Books.