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Pray Hard

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

At twelve years old, Amelia Forrest has a lot to pray for: improving her poor grades, mending a strained relationship with her mama, and, most importantly, absolving her guilt over the role she played in her daddy's plane crash. Except that in the year since he died, Amelia has stopped believing in anything. Not prayer. Not miracles. And certainly not the crackpot visions of an ex-convict named Brother Mustard Seed who suddenly appeared at their door claiming to have contact with her daddy.

So when Mama invites him to live with them, it stirs up all sorts of trouble—as well as a deep sorrow that Amelia thought she had put to rest.

By turns sassy and lyrical and wise, Pray Hard is exceptional storytelling from an original new voice.

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  • Reviews

    • AudioFile Magazine
      Twelve-year-old Amelia blames herself for her father's death in a plane crash and lives through a year of grief before telling anyone her secret. Marguerite Gavin narrates this poignant story of loss and acceptance. Capturing both Amelia and her mother's sorrow, Gavin presents these characters' raw emotions and shares their mourning with the listener. Unable to cope with the loss of her father, Amelia turns inward as her mother grows more and more lethargic. It's not until Brother Mustard Seed shows up on their doorstep that they have any hope for the future. This is a must-listen for anyone who has experienced the profound loss of a parent. D.L.M. (c) AudioFile 2005, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 1, 2001
      Recalling works by both Han Nolan and Martha Moore, this studiously quirky first novel looks at a small-town Kentucky girl whose contact with an offbeat stranger helps her come to terms with the death of her father, killed the previous summer while piloting a small plane. While her mother is out getting "beautified" at the Clicking Clippers salon, 12-year-old Amelia Forrest opens the door to a born-again ex-convict improbably named Brother Mustard Seed. It turns out that Brother Mustard Seed had met Amelia's father who, as a Baptist missionary, had visited him in prison and showed him the way to the Lord. Now Brother Mustard Seed claims to have had a vision of Amelia's father, telling him to go to Amelia and her mother: "They need your help." Amelia, who narrates, is highly cynical, but her mother decides to "exercise right to be open minded." Meanwhile, Amelia harbors secret feelings of guilt (closing chapters reveal that Amelia is sure that the popper toy she had planted behind his seat had popped out mid-flight and distracted him, causing him to crash). Coincidences mount and Amelia reconsiders her assumptions. She learns to live with questions: being brave, she concludes, means that "sometimes you had to do something without knowing the full reason for doing it." While Walker firmly resolves one of Amelia's quandaries by having her find the toy in question, she leaves the visions and the coincidences open-ended. For all the mannered cast and plot, the conclusion is highly satisfying and accomplished in its deference to readers' imaginations. Ages 10-14.

Formats

  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:4.9
  • Lexile® Measure:790
  • Interest Level:4-8(MG)
  • Text Difficulty:3-4

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