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Overview
There is a lion in our village, and it is carrying away our children.
At her father's funeral, Binti's grandmother utters the words that no one in Malawi wants to hear. Binti's father and her mother before him,
dies of AIDS. Binti, her sister, and brother are separated and sent to the home of relatives who can barely tolerate their presence. Ostracized by their extended family, the orphans are treated like the lowest servants. With her brother far away and her sister wallowing in her own sorrow, Binti can hardly contain her rage. She, Binti Phirim, was once a child star of a popular radio program. Now she is scraping to survive. Binti always believed she was special, now she is nothing but a common AIDS orphan.
Binti Phiri is not about to give up. Even as she clings to hope that her former life will be restored, she must face a greater challenge. If she and her brother and sister are to reunited, Binti Phiri will have to look outside herself and find a new way to be special.
Compelling and uplifting, The Heaven Shop, is a contemporary novel that puts a very real face on the African AIDS pandemic, which to-date has orphaned more than 11 million African children. Inspired by a young radio performer the author met during her research visit to Malawi, Binti Phiri is a compelling character that readers will never forget.
Awards and Nominations:
- Ontario Library Association's Golden Oak Award winner 2006
- Winner of the 2005 Jane Addams Children's Book Award in the category of Honor Books for Older Children
- Shortlisted for the 2006 Alberta Children's Choice Book Award
- A ManitobaYoung Readers' Choice Awards Honour Book for 2006
- Foreword Magazine 2004 Book of the Year Award finalist
- A Children's Africana Book Awards (CABA) 2005 Honor Book for Older Readers
- A Canadian Children's Book Centre Our Choice 2005
- Ruth & Sylvia Schwartz Children's Book Award for Young Adult/Middle Reader Books finalist
- Red Maple Book Award nominee 2005
Synopsis
At her father s funeral, Binti s grandmother utters the words that no one in Malawi wants to hear. Binti s father and her mother before him, dies of AIDS. Binti, her sister, and brother are separated and sent to the home of relatives who can barely tolerate their presence. Ostracized by their extended family, the orphans are treated like the lowest servants. With her brother far away and her sister wallowing in her own sorrow, Binti can hardly contain her rage. She, Binti Phirim, was once a child star of a popular radio program. Now she is scraping to survive. Binti always believed she was special, now she is nothing but a common AIDS orphan.
Binti Phiri is not about to give up. Even as she clings to hope that her former life will be restored, she must face a greater challenge. If she and her brother and sister are to reunited, Binti Phiri will have to look outside herself and find a new way to be special.
Compelling and uplifting, The Heaven Shop, is a contemporary novel that puts a very real face on the African AIDS pandemic, which to-date has orphaned more than 11 million African children. Inspired by a young radio performer the author met during her research visit to Malawi, Binti Phiri is a compelling character that readers will never forget.
Publishers Weekly
In her latest novel focused on world issues, Ellis (the Breadwinner trilogy) focuses on the plight of AIDS orphans in Mulawi. In the opening chapters, current events take precedence over character development. The author establishes how 13-year old Binti went from starring on a popular radio show, attending a private girls' school and helping her generous father tend his Heaven coffin shop, to becoming an impoverished AIDS orphan. However, Binti comes to the fore once her father dies (at the funeral, her grandmother reveals the cause as AIDS) and greedy relatives descend upon Binti and her siblings, seize their possessions, and grudgingly offer them homes (separating the sisters from their brother). Ellis lays bare the prejudice and superstitions surrounding AIDS: the abusive uncle who adopts Binti cautions his children to "keep away from them," to avoid contracting the disease, and men believe that sleeping with a virgin will cure them. Hardship has an impact on the family in myriad ways, including her brother's trip to prison and her sister's sensitively portrayed downward spiral into prostitution, but it also brings the siblings full circle to seek out their grandmother, who cares for a band of AIDS orphans, and to employ their coffin-making skills to start another Heaven Shop. The ending may seem a bit tidy to readers who become immersed in this grim portrait of disease and ignorance, but they will likely cheer on this stalwart heroine and may well pay closer attention to headlines about AIDS and Africa. Ages 11-14. (Oct.) FYI: Royalties from book sales will be donated to Unicef. Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.
Editorials
Publishers Weekly
In her latest novel focused on world issues, Ellis (the Breadwinner trilogy) focuses on the plight of AIDS orphans in Mulawi. In the opening chapters, current events take precedence over character development. The author establishes how 13-year old Binti went from starring on a popular radio show, attending a private girls' school and helping her generous father tend his Heaven coffin shop, to becoming an impoverished AIDS orphan. However, Binti comes to the fore once her father dies (at the funeral, her grandmother reveals the cause as AIDS) and greedy relatives descend upon Binti and her siblings, seize their possessions, and grudgingly offer them homes (separating the sisters from their brother). Ellis lays bare the prejudice and superstitions surrounding AIDS: the abusive uncle who adopts Binti cautions his children to "keep away from them," to avoid contracting the disease, and men believe that sleeping with a virgin will cure them. Hardship has an impact on the family in myriad ways, including her brother's trip to prison and her sister's sensitively portrayed downward spiral into prostitution, but it also brings the siblings full circle to seek out their grandmother, who cares for a band of AIDS orphans, and to employ their coffin-making skills to start another Heaven Shop. The ending may seem a bit tidy to readers who become immersed in this grim portrait of disease and ignorance, but they will likely cheer on this stalwart heroine and may well pay closer attention to headlines about AIDS and Africa. Ages 11-14. (Oct.) FYI: Royalties from book sales will be donated to Unicef. Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.KLIATT
The Heaven Shop sells coffins that will "take you swiftly to heaven." And coffins are much needed in Malawi, because AIDS is killing so many people. Binti is 13 years old when the story begins. She is successful on a radio show and she and her brother and sister are doing well in a private school. Binti's older sister June has cared for them for several years, since the death of their mother. Now the children's father is very ill and soon he dies of AIDS. The relatives are the first to gather and inform the children both parents died of AIDS, and therefore they too are tainted. The relatives take over all assets left to the children and force them to relocate, where the three work in terrible conditions for their relatives. June, the older sister, takes up prostitution as a way of earning money, and by the end of the story, she too is infected with H.I.V. Meanwhile, Binti leaves the cruel relatives and journeys to find her elderly grandmother who is living in abject poverty, trying to care for a group of little children whose parents are dead or dying from AIDS. Her brother ends up in prison for "stealing" food from his uncle, but fortunately friendly community workers help the three siblings reunite. Binti finally finds herself again after all the grief and hardship: life is still hard, but she finds purpose in caring for the little children and returning to school and being in plays once again. Also, the siblings make coffins and start up another Heaven Shop to earn enough money to feed themselves and the others in their now-extended family. Ellis has written before about children elsewhere in the world who are living extremely difficult lives. (She is the author of the Breadwinnertrilogy set in Afghanistan, about children who are refugees in the war zone there.) She herself has traveled in Malawi and knows firsthand of the devastation caused by AIDS in that culture and the presence of millions of orphans whose parents have died of AIDS. So many teachers, doctors, nurses and other professionals have died that schools are closed and medical care is inadequate. By reading this gripping story, students will understand how the epidemic of AIDS in Africa has changed individuals and whole societies. KLIATT Codes: J—Recommended for junior high school students. 2004, Fitzhenry & Whiteside, 186p., Ages 12 to 15.—Claire Rosser