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Overview
Lois Lowry won her first Newbery Medal in 1994 for The Giver. Six years later, she ushered readers back into its mysterious but plausible future world in Gathering Blue to tell the story of Kira, orphaned, physically flawed, and left with an uncertain future. This second book in the Giver Quartet has been stunningly redesigned in paperback.
As she did in The Giver and later Messenger, in Gathering Blue Lois Lowry challenges readers to imagine what our world could become, how people could evolve, and what could be considered valuable.
Lame and suddenly orphaned, Kira is mysteriously removed from her squalid village to live in the palatial Council Edifice, where she is expected to use her gifts as a weaver to do the bidding of the all-powerful Guardians.
Editorials
From the Publisher
"Lowry returns to the metaphorical future world of her Newbery-winning The Giver. . . . Plenty of material for thought and discussion here, plus a touch of magic and a tantalizing hint about the previous book’s famously ambiguous ending." (6/15/00) Kirkus Reviews with Pointers"Lowry is a master at creating worlds, both real and imagined, and this incarnation of our civilization some time in the future is one of her strongest creations." —Booklist, starred review (6/1/00) Booklist, ALA, Starred Review
Publishers Weekly -
After conjuring the pitfalls of a technologically advanced society in The Giver, Lowry looks toward a different type of future to create this dark, prophetic tale with a strong medieval flavor. Having suffered numerous unnamed disasters (aka, the Ruin), civilization has regressed to a primitive, technology-free state; an opening author's note describes a society in which "disorder, savagery, and self-interest" rule. Kira, a crippled young weaver, has been raised and taught her craft by her mother, after her father was allegedly killed by "beasts." When her mother dies, Kira fears that she will be cast out of the village. Instead, the society's Council of Guardians installs her as caretaker of the Singer's robe, a precious ceremonial garment depicting the history of the world and used at the annual Gathering. She moves to the Council Edifice, a gothic-style structure, one of the few to survive the Ruin. The edifice and other settings, such as the Fen--the village ghetto--and the small plot where Annabella (an elder weaver who mentors Kira after her mother's death) lives are especially well drawn, and the characterizations of Kira and the other artists who cohabit the stone residence are the novel's greatest strength. But the narrative hammers at the theme of the imprisoned artist. And readers may well predict where several important plot threads are headed (e.g., the role of Kira's Guardian, Jamison; her father's disappearance), while larger issues, such as the society's downfall, are left to readers' imaginations. Ages 10-up. (Sept.) Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.From The Critics
Gathering Blue is the intense story of Kira, a young weaver girl with a crippled leg. This tale is set in a in a harsh and brutish future world where the handicapped and weak are shunned or abandoned as having little to offer. In fact, many are taken to a "Field of Leaving" to lie among the bodies of the already dead. It is here the story opens After her mother's death, Kira is tending her mother's body for the customary time. But when she returns from the Field of Leaving, she finds that the village women want to drive her out of her home and take over its gardens now that Kira's mother is no longer there to protect her. Kira confronts the ringleader with the law regarding conflicts, and the disagreement is taken to the mysterious Council of Guardians, which makes all the laws for the village. When Kira finds herself in the council's hands, she is puzzled that they seem so interested in her skill with a needle and thread. But she is even more surprised by the council's decision to remove her from the village and make a new home for her in the ancient building that houses the Council of Guardians. Here, Kira is given a comfortable room much finer than anything she had ever known in the village. She is given fine clothes and all the food she needs. She is also given a task of great importance: repairing an ancient robe that tells in pictures the history of the world. This robe has been worn for generations by a singer who, once a year, sings a long song for the whole village, a retelling of what was, what is, and what shall come to pass. Soon, she finds there are other children who live within the council's walls, children who are orphans like her and have their own specialskills: Thomas the woodcarver, and Jo the singer. Like Kira, they are all set on a task of restoration. With a job that allows her to use her skills and friends that have similar tasks involving their own artistic skills, Kira is extremely content at first. But she soon realizes that the council's grip on all the children is much tighter than she realized. The children's artistic abilities had blossomed until now. Now their own ideas are being strangled because they can do no more with their talents than what the council says. Kira must decide whether she should stay and continue serving the council or go to a place she has heard of, a place where people live free and where a rare plant grows that produces blue dye—the one color that has grown faded on the Singer's robe. This book is simply amazing. It brings rich pictures to the reader's mind and has a feel reminiscent of The Giver (Houghton Mifflin, 1993), another of Lowry's books. Lois Lowry has already won many awards and I think this one will win her even more. 2000, Houghton Mifflin, $15.00. Ages 9 to 12. Reviewer: Brittany Rogers — The Five Owls, March/April 2001 (Vol. 15 No. 4)Children's Literature
With characteristic grace, Lowry pulls her reader into this tale of a devastated world in which judgments are harsh and the dead are left to rot in the fields. Here we find Kira, her leg twisted from birth and her heart, impossibly, nourishing hope. Kira is in a struggle for survival, and the world she inhabits has been crafted with care. The narrative voice is compelling, and in the end, the reader is left with the satisfying sense that in the creation of beauty out of cruelty lies infinite potential. Those who appreciated The Giver will find here another readable, futuristic fantasy, set in a world of flaws and fortunes that bear contemplation in relevance to our own. 2000, Houghton Mifflin. Ages 10 up. Reviewer: Uma KrishnaswamiVOYA
This outstanding novel is set in a futuristic hunter-gatherer society in which primitive laws and barbaric custom hold sway. Fatherless thirteen-year-old Kira, almost killed at birth because of her twisted leg, was saved when her mother intervened. After her mother dies, Kira turns to the village's Council of Guardians for help when the village women try to kill her for her meager plot of land. The Council spares Kira because her extraordinary weaving talents will allow her to complete the ceremonial robe worn in the village's annual gathering by the village Singer. Kira is sent to live in the Council offices, where she meets Thomas, a young woodcarver using his exceptional skills to complete the Singer's staff, and Jo, a six-year-old being trained to take over the duties of the Singer. The three prodigies, however, soon begin to lose the joy they had previously taken in their gifts. As the annual gathering draws near, Kira and Thomas discover that their parents and Jo's might have died at the Council's hands so that the Council could control the children's remarkable talents. Lowry has created a world diametrically opposed to the technologically centered, rigidly structured world of The Giver (Houghton, 1993/VOYA August 1993). This title similarly leaves its young protagonist at a crossroads, and one hopes that Kira's story will continue. The author weaves in details that bring Kira's world to life as seamlessly as Jonas's in The Giver. Readers can see and feel Kira's excitement when she finally acquires the ability to make blue, a color that has eluded her people. This extraordinary novel is remarkable for its fully realized characters, gripping plot, and Lowry's singular vision of afuture in which technology does not predominate but has instead been essentially discarded. VOYA CODES: 5Q 4P J S (Hard to imagine it being any better written; Broad general YA appeal; Junior High, defined as grades 7 to 9; Senior High, defined as grades 10 to 12). 2000, Houghton Mifflin, 224p, $15. Ages 13 to 18. Reviewer: Leah J. SparksSOURCE: VOYA, October 2000 (Vol. 23, No. 4)