Record Details
Book cover

No ordinary day

A young Indian girl struggles to survive living as a street child. The only thing she fears are the "monsters

Book  - 2011
J FIC Ellis
1 copy / 0 on hold

Available Copies by Location

Location
Victoria Available
  • ISBN: 1554981085
  • ISBN: 9781554981083
  • Physical Description 159 pages
  • Publisher Toronto : Groundwood Books, 2011.

Content descriptions

General Note:
"House of Anansi Press."
Immediate Source of Acquisition Note:
LSC 12.95

Additional Information

Syndetic Solutions - Kirkus Review for ISBN Number 1554981085
No Ordinary Day
No Ordinary Day
by Ellis, Deborah
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Kirkus Review

No Ordinary Day

Kirkus Reviews


Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Homeless orphan Valli is always friendly, if amoral.When Valli can, she sneaks glimpses at Bollywood dances, learns a little reading or throws rocks at the monsterspeople without faces or fingerswho live on the other side of the tracks. Most of the time, however, she picks up coal. Sick of beatings, hunger and coal, Valli hides on a passing truck, fleeing her life of poverty for a life of... well, more poverty, but also more excitement. On the Kolkata streets she lives day-to-day. Constantly starving, she contentedly begs and steals; when she has something she doesn't need (a bit of extra soap, a blanket), she passes it on to somebody else. When Valli tries her luck begging from kind Dr. Indra, she learns she has leprosy, just like the faceless monsters back home. It takes some time, but Valli learns to accept help from the women who offer it to her: Dr. Indra, who works at the leprosy hospital; Neeta, a sales manager with leprosy who teaches Valli how to make pie charts; Laxmi, a teenager who's been burned. An emphasis on Christmas falls discordant, but Valli's journey from stubborn solitude to member of a community is richly fulfilling.A true-to-life portrait of a young girl's cheerful selfishness in this surprisingly optimistic novel of unrelenting poverty. (Fiction. 9-11)]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Syndetic Solutions - School Library Journal Review for ISBN Number 1554981085
No Ordinary Day
No Ordinary Day
by Ellis, Deborah
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School Library Journal Review

No Ordinary Day

School Library Journal


(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Gr 3-6-Valli, about 10, lives in the poverty-stricken town of Jharia, India, where she is a coal picker. When she makes a shocking discovery about her family, she runs away and, after a series of harrowing events, reaches the bustling city of Kolkata. Valli survives on the street by stealing and begging. With no plan, no support system, and failing health, she begins to lose hope. While begging for change one day, she is befriended by a kind doctor who recognizes Valli's symptoms of leprosy. The child is terrified with this diagnosis as back home the village children had thrown stones at people with this disease, calling them "monsters." With the help of the doctor and other leprosy patients, Valli gets treatment and education, learns tolerance for people different from herself, and simultaneously realizes her own self-worth. Although many important lessons are presented in this even-paced, clearly written story, it is never heavy-handed or didactic. Valli is a well-developed, realistic, and engaging narrator. While American readers may not all relate to her ordeals, they will recognize common emotions for people their age. The story highlights not only the overcoming of adversity, but also the importance of education and literacy. It also brings to light the issue of leprosy, which is misunderstood. An important, inspiring tale.-Rita Meade, Brooklyn Public Library, NY (c) Copyright 2011. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Syndetic Solutions - The Horn Book Review for ISBN Number 1554981085
No Ordinary Day
No Ordinary Day
by Ellis, Deborah
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The Horn Book Review

No Ordinary Day

The Horn Book


(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

How does a homeless child survive Kolkata's mean streets? For orphaned Valli, who may be nine (she herself doesn't know), it's by "borrowing" items like the hotel blanket she passes on to an even needier mother and children; it's incorporating poetry scavenged from discarded books into her begging routine, being wary of strangers, and living by her wits and in the moment. Having discovered that her "aunt" wasn't really kin, Valli escaped to Kolkata on a coal truck, only to have its crew deliver her to what older readers will understand is a brothel. Thrown out because of her telltale symptoms of leprosy, Valli is on her own for months before she encounters a better kind of stranger: Dr. Indra, who -- having noticed Valli's numb, wounded feet -- lures her, with masterful tact, to a hospital for lepers. Terrified of these "monsters," Valli bolts, but eventually returns for the promised cure and with hopes for the future. Ellis writes with great skill, folding character, attitudes, and other vital information into Valli's deceptively simple narrative, depicting the survival skills of India's poorest with notable insight and compassion. Appended with an author's note about leprosy. joanna rudge long (c) Copyright 2011. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Syndetic Solutions - Publishers Weekly Review for ISBN Number 1554981085
No Ordinary Day
No Ordinary Day
by Ellis, Deborah
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Publishers Weekly Review

No Ordinary Day

Publishers Weekly


(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

Ellis (the Breadwinner trilogy) again brings an individual humanity to newspaper headlines. Giving voice to an orphan girl living on the streets of Calcutta unaware of her leprosy, Ellis turns a potentially unpalatable subject into a fresh and compelling story that focuses on Valli's spirited personality and sly cleverness. Valli runs away from her poverty-stricken home in the coal town of Jharia, India, when she learns that she is not a true member of the family she lives with. In Calcutta, she learns to survive by "borrowing" what she needs, be it blankets, money, or food. Quick, intelligent, and fearless, Valli is content living day to day until she meets a doctor who takes her for treatment to the hospital, where she finds herself among the "monsters" she feared most in Jharia-leprosy-stricken, disfigured people. Refusing to acknowledge she is one of them, she escapes back to the streets, until she finally understands she has the potential to lead a better life. Ellis's straightforward language and uncompromising depictions of Valli's unimaginably harsh and gritty world combine with believable character development to create a strong and accessible novel. Ages 9-12. (Sept.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

Syndetic Solutions - BookList Review for ISBN Number 1554981085
No Ordinary Day
No Ordinary Day
by Ellis, Deborah
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BookList Review

No Ordinary Day

Booklist


From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.

*Starred Review* Valli, an orphan living in Jharia, India, spends her days picking up coal, fighting with cousins, and avoiding the monsters (lepers, actually) who live on the other side of the tracks. When she learns her family are not true blood relatives, she runs away to Kolkata, where she survives by borrowing what she needs, using it for a while, and then passing it on to someone else. Finally, she meets Dr. Indra, who recognizes that Valli, too, suffers from leprosy and helps the child to secure treatment and hope for a better future. What keeps this story from becoming maudlin is Valli's positive outlook. Quick, intelligent, and fearless, she isn't above begging to ensure her survival, but rarely does she play the victim card. Details about leprosy (causes, symptoms, treatment, prognosis) are carefully woven into the story and never feel forced or didactic. While Valli's situation will seem alien to most young North Americans, this compelling and accessible novel will enlighten, spark discussion, and prompt readers to try other Ellis titles, in particular, the Breadwinner trilogy.--Weisman, Kay Copyright 2010 Booklist