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Quiver: A Novel, by Julia Watts
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Review
"2018 Fall Okra Pick." ―Southern Independent Booksellers AlliancePerfect 10 Rating, VOYA Magazine "Quiver is an amazing, heartfelt book with a powerful lesson to share. Nearly all young adults feel judged or excluded at some point in their lives; this story will help anyone, no matter their situation, see that acceptance is possible.†―Foreword Reviews, starred review“Sympathetic and believable.†―Publishers Weekly"An examination of friendship and events in life that make us reconsider why we believe what we believe." ―Booklist“Discussions of values and morality are straightforward and thoughtful, offering some provocative opportunities for readers to articulate their own possibly unquestioned views in discussion. The atmosphere is vivid: Watts’ knowledge of country Tennessee shines through in the details.†―The Bulletin of the Center for Children’s Books“[A] contemporary gem . . . touches on many societal divides including ideology, religion and sexuality.†―Catholic Library World“This is a wonderful story of friendship between two young people who are seeking their place within a world that is constantly changing, sometimes not for the better. For anyone who has felt “different,†Watts’s novel will be ultimately relatable.†―VOYA Magazine"Opens important conversations about faith, family, independence, and identity." Kirkus Reviews“This just may be the perfect book for our times, when acknowledgement of common ground and empathy are sorely needed.†―New York Journal of Books“Julia Watts’ new novel finds room for friendship in the so-called culture wars.†―Chapter 16“[A] story about families and the difference between love and obedience. . . . thoughtful.†―School Library Journal“Quiver is one of those LGBTQ YA books that humanizes both left-wing and conservative right viewpoints in the idea that most people are just trying to do the right thing. If you want to cultivate empathy for a perspective different from your own, this could be a powerful read.†―Andy Windner“A thought-provoking young adult novel that explores fundamental Christianity and gender-fluidity . . . absolutely outstanding.†―Book Reviews and More by Kathy "Remarkable. . . . If you're looking for a book that allows you to experience worlds you aren't familiar with, I can't recommend Quiver strongly enough.†―Dews Reviews“A hopeful book. . . . Recommended for readers who seek possible bridges across the divides in our society.†―Me, You, and Books“With Quiver, Julia Watts captures the essence of growing up in two wildly disparate families, and weaves a unique, compassionate tale of unlikely friendship. It's impossible not to root for Libby and Zo! â€â€•Meagan Brothers, author, Weird Girl and What’s His Name"Told from alternating points of view, this beautifully written book is just what the world needs right now. Quiver aimed for my heart and hit it straight on.†―Lesléa Newman, author October Mourning: A Song for Matthew Shepard“Julia Watts’ latest novel captures, with painful accuracy, the pointed conflicts between liberals and ultra-conservatives, tensions that pervade the United States in general and Appalachia in particular at this perilous point in our country’s history. Quiver is one of the most moving books I’ve ever read.†―Jeff Mann, author, Cub and Country“HIGHLY Recommend. This is the type of book that can make magic happen: it can open minds and challenge viewpoints through the unfolding of a truly beautiful story.†―Amy Christine Parker, author, Gated and Astray“Julia Watts is a natural-born storyteller, and in her latest novel she has quite a story to tell. In its empathic and even-handed focus on the unlikely friendship between two teens whose families are on opposite sides of the religious/political spectrum, Quiver is a necessary book that’s both of and for these terrible times.†―Robin Lippincott, author, Blue Territory: A Meditation on the Life and Art of Joan Mitchell
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About the Author
A native of Southeastern Kentucky, Julia Watts has written thirteen novels for adults and young adults, most of which explore the lives of LGBT people in rural and smalltown Appalachia. Her novel Finding H.F. won the 2002 Lambda Literary Award in the Children’s/Young Adult category. A novel for adults, The Kind of Girl I Am, was a finalist for a Lambda Literary Award in the Women’s Fiction category, and her 2013 young adult novel Secret City was a finalist for a Lambda Literary Award and a winner of a Golden Crown Literary Award. Julia’s other titles include Gifted and Talented; Hypnotizing Chickens; and most recently, Rufus + Syd, co written with Robin Lippincott. Julia holds an MFA in Writing from Spalding University and has spoken at various national and regional conferences, including the AWP Conference, the NCTE Conference, the Appalachian Studies Association Conference, and the Denham Symposium on Appalachian Literature. She teaches at South College and in Murray State University’s low-residency MFA in Writing program. She was recently inducted into the East Tennessee Writers Hall of Fame. She currently resides in Knoxville, Tennessee.
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Product details
Paperback: 300 pages
Publisher: Three Rooms Press (October 16, 2018)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 9781941110669
ISBN-13: 978-1941110669
ASIN: 1941110665
Product Dimensions:
5.5 x 0.8 x 8.5 inches
Shipping Weight: 14.9 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
Average Customer Review:
4.3 out of 5 stars
14 customer reviews
Amazon Best Sellers Rank:
#260,698 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
** Trigger warning for misogyny, homophobia, and domestic violence. **Mr. Hazlett’s getting worked up, too. A vein in his forehead bulges disturbingly. “In a Christian home, the man is like God, and his wife is the holy church.â€Dad laughs out loud. Maybe a little too loud. “So you get to be a deity, and she just gets to be a building?â€###I don’t know what shocks me more—my grandmother cursing or hearing her say I have the right to choose what to do with my life.###— 4.5 stars —Liberty Hazlett is the oldest of six children. Well, seven counting the baby on the way. Nine with the two angel babies that died in utero. Each child is named after a Christian virtue: Justice, Patience, Faith, Valor, Charity. They live in rural Tennessee, where father James has his own small business (Hazlett and Sons Pest Control), and mother Becky homeschools them. The kids (the girls in particular) have little contact with the outside world, and their everyday lives are strictly regulated. (For real: they’re allowed ten minutes for a shower, as “it’s not good to stay in the bathroom too long because it leads to temptationâ€).Libby and her family are part of the Quiverfull movement: a Christian patriarchy that doesn’t practice any form of birth control, including so-called “natural family planning.†(Think: the Duggars.) Rather, they “trust the Lord†to give them as many children as he desires/thinks they can handle – each of which is to become an arrow in the Lord’s quiver, a Christian soldier in His army, hence the sect’s (read: cult’s) name.At sixteen years old, Libby is barreling towards marriageable age. This means wedding a virtuous Christian man of her father’s choosing; accepting her husband as the head of the household; and obeying him in all matters, from sex to finances to child rearing…even what opinions she should adopt on any given topic under the Heavens. It also means churning out children like a baby factory, until her body wears out. Only, pray as she might, Libby doesn’t want this life for herself. She knows it’s sinful, but she has two eyes and a fully functioning brain, and she can see the toll it’s taking on her mother.Zo Forrester and her family – younger brother Owen and parents Jen and Todd – just moved into “the old Dobbins place†next door. Life in Knoxville was wearing them all down, so they traded it in for a simpler existence in the country. Todd traded in his nursing job for one at the department of health, and Jen homeschools the kids and does some weaving on the side.The Hazletts might define Zo as an uppity young heathen woman, but Zo’s gender identity is more complicated than all that: she’s gender fluid.“Being a lesbian was really important to Hadley, and she wanted me to say I was one, too. But if I said I was a lesbian, I’d be saying I was a 100 percent girl who only liked other 100 percent girls, and I couldn’t say that. Sometimes I feel like a boy in lipstick. Sometimes I feel like a girl with a bulge in her jeans. Sometimes I don’t even feel like I have a gender—that the body that contains my personality is no more significant than the jar that holds the peanut butter. I’m fine with all of this, but Hadley wasn’t.â€In contrast to the “tragic queer†narratives that dominate fiction (yes, LGBTQ folks face higher levels of violence across the board, and it’s important to explore this – but we need uplifting, happy stories, too!), the Forresters are incredibly accepting of both their kids. They’re also super-progressive and open-minded, basically the exact opposite of Lord James, so much so that I wish they could retroactively and imaginarily adopt me.For reasons that no doubt include loneliness and isolation, the Hazlett and Forrester kids – Libby + Zo and Val + Owen in particular – are drawn to each other, despite their differences. Even the women find companionship and understanding in their unlikely friendship. At first, Mr. Hazlett allows limited socialization, viewing it as a means to an end: namely, converting the sinners next door. But when an ice cream social goes sideways, he forbids his family from having anything to do with them. But teens are gonna teen, am I right?I thought I’d like QUIVER – I have a strange can’t-look-away, car-accident fascination for the Quiverfull movement – but it’s even better than I expected. Libby and Zo are complex, compelling protagonists; no surprise there. But Becky has great backstory that’s equal amounts engaging and depressingly predictable. (Just look at the Jonestown recruits.) Jen and Todd are both awesome too; how could you not love a dad who describes himself as a “feminist vegetarian atheist socialist who votes for Democrats because that’s the best you can hope for in this country†and “believe[s] in labor unions, gun control, LGBTQIA equality, contraception, and separation of church and state.†Like I said, adopt me please!The story is told from the alternating perspectives of each girl; given their radically different worldviews (or indoctrination, in Libby’s case), it’s really neat to read such different accounts of the same event. Watts paints each girl with depth and nuance, which is no small feat in Libby’s case – she could all too easily become a caricature. Tattletale/Little Miss Perfect Patience kind of skirts that line, but I feel like the ending really speaks to the complete and utter indoctrination she’s experienced. I felt rather bad for her by the last page. Again, no small feat, since she acts like such a terrible sister/daughter/Sister throughout the book.As someone who’s been on the atheist/Zo side of the friendship equation, there was actually quite a bit to which I could relate here. Additionally, the idea of showing civility towards uncivil people – people who would kidnap migrant children and keep them in cages, for example – is especially relevant now. (As I write this, it is the last day of June, and #KeepFamiliesTogether protests are happening around the world.) Regarding the ‘rents, most of whom were trying to “be civil†for the sake of their kids’ friendships, should one really smile and nod when a Mr. Hazlett tells your wife to shut up because women aren’t allowed to have opinions? Should you smile and nod even if it’s his own wife he’s talking to?In sum, QUIVER is entertaining and engaging and even kind of fun, between the depressing and infuriating bits. Most of all, it’s hecka relevant today, which is perhaps the most depressing and infuriating thing of all.That said, I really wish the Forresters had adopted their bunnies instead of buying them from a breeder. Not cool, guys. Also Daiya cheese exists and it is AWESOME. You can even make your own vegan mozzarella nowadays, Jen. Please allow me to recommend THE CHEESY VEGAN by John Schlimm.
A fundamentalist family with 6 children and one on the way- the family ascribes to the Quiverfull ideology which eschews birth control-has new neighbors. A worldly family of four with a gender-fluid daughter, Zo, the same age as fundamentalist Lib, the oldest daughter. Lib knows that their lifestyle is condemned, but she observes that the family is loving and works for charity, all without being her father's kind of Christian. Although she is generally content with her own lifestyle, if only her father would let her ask more questions, she can see that Zo and her family don't act wicked or unhappy. Zo becomes her best friend, before the inevitable blow out between the families that have such opposite values.One thing I like is that both families are described as loving and content with their lifestyles, yet each has to deal with conflicts and downsides. Lib's mother also questions patriarchical decisions and is frank with her about the sacrifices their lifestyle requires. The crisis in the story might well have been avoided if her father had a bit more flexibility. The difference between the attitudes of the families on punishment is illuminating. But no one is just a caricature.
The beautifully-crafted YA novel “Quiver†by Julia Watts is a masterful parable about what happens when conviction edges over into fanaticism. As the jacket summary explains, the Hazlett family is eking out a living in rural Eastern Tennessee as devotees of the ultra-fundamentalist “Quiverfull Movementâ€. When the story begins, the Forrester family has just moved in next door. Zo Forrester, a gender-fluid teen presenting mostly as female, and Libby, the eldest of the (currently) six Hazlett children, begin to form a friendship, and Zo’s younger brother Owen is thrilled to play with the four youngest Hazlett kids..The narrative is well-balanced and sensitive. At the beginning, the positive aspects of the Hazlett perspective are well-drawn. Becky Hazlett, the mother, seems to be doing a loving job of organizing her home-schooled brood of four girls and two boys, managing well on the sparse income from her husband’s pest control business. Similarly, the Forresters are understandable, being ecologically-minded vegetarians who are also homeschooling Zo and Owen. However, inevitably, the free-thinking Mr. Forrester locks horns with the patriarchal Mr. Hazlett, who forbids his children to associate with the “heathens†next door. When Libby sneaks out for a midnight rendezvous with Zo, the vicious punishment she receives exposes her father’s fanaticism in stark terms, and things just get worse from there.As I’ve said in previous reviews, it is quite obvious that the YA genre is a very up-and-coming addition to literature. This book, like a number of others I have reviewed recently, deals honestly with the issues and crises of our current culture, and provides a very welcome examination of the taboos and myths that have plagued humankind for millennia. Although it is clear where Julia Watts stands philosophically, she presents her point of view via characters who are well-drawn and definitely not stereotyped. This is certainly a book worth reading.
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