The Year Of My Miraculous Reappearance

Cynnie takes care of herself—and more importantly, she takes care of her little brother, Bill. So it doesn't matter that her mom is drunk all the time. Cynnie's got her own life. Cynnie's the one Bill loves more than anyone. Cynnie's the real mother in the house. And if there's one thing she knows for sure, it's that she'll never, ever sink as low as her mother.

But when things start to fall apart, Cynnie needs a way to dull the pain.

Never say never.

This unflinching look at the power of addiction is the story of one girl's fall into darkness—and the strength, trust, and forgiveness it takes to climb back out again.



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"This book is very close to perfect. It's hard for me to imagine anyone feeling too grown-up for this story."
--The Phildelphia Inquirer
April 29, 2007

Reviewed by Katie Haegele The second thing 13-year-old Cynnie does, shortly after we meet her, is steal her mom's boyfriend's knife while the two are screaming at each other and too drunk to notice.

The first thing she does is pick up her little brother Bill, who has Down Syndrome, and cradle him, because no one else can cheer him up when he's crying, including their mother (who doesn't even try). When Cynnie sings to Bill he trills the tunes back to her. At 3, the only word he can say is her name.

Those are two important things to know about Cynnie, and I told them to you in that order to get your attention. But Catherine Ryan Hyde, the author of this beautifully real novel, put the first one first for a reason. It takes Cynnie a long time to realize she's a good kid, but Hyde makes sure we know it right from the start.

Cynnie and Bill live with their mom - and her mom's succession of loser boyfriends - in some unspecified place in the American southwest, a place where people have horse ranches and Arizona and California are close enough for runaways to drive to, as Cynnie soon finds out.

And yes, the first half of this book is about the regrettable decisions Cynnie makes. Things start out bad, but they get worse when her mom tells her Nanny and Grampop are coming for a visit. Something about the announcement "got [her]stomach's attention," as Cynnie tells us. Sure enough, it turns out they're coming to take Bill home with them because Cynnie's mom is such a mess. This breaks Cynnie's heart, but it also makes her angry: Why won't they take her, too?

It's around this time that she starts copying her mom by drinking gin or wine whenever she feels sad, which is most of the time. At 13, she's graduated from trying to keep her mom from burning the house down when she passes out smoking: She's developing a substantial drinking habit of her own.

The beauty of the book is that this girl never once strikes us as other. From the very first sentence she's real, funny, a friend. We do get glimpses of her as others see her - she tells us that the other girls in the neighborhood call her Tarzan, and she admits that she doesn't really know anyone at school and no one really knows her. But even though Miraculous Reappearance is touted as being about marginalized people, outsiders, there's nothing alien about the feelings Cynnie has to learn to face: fear of getting hurt, anger at her family, the sadness of missing Bill. You don't have to be an alcoholic to appreciate any of those things.

The other great thing about Hyde, whose previous novels inlcude Pay It Forward, is that she tells you what you need to know. When Cynnie and her friend Snake go out for ice cream one day, she narrates, "And then we were at the ice cream place, and there was no line." That little bit of information might not seem like much, but it's something almost any other writer would forget. When you're the one getting ice cream you care whether or not there's a line. Hyde isn't just crafting a story here; she makes that subtle sidle over the line into really inhabiting her character's life.

Her writing, reminiscent of the evocative style of S.E. Hinton, makes me think of the surprising response I once got when I said hello to a stranger and asked him how he was doing. "Very close to perfect," he reported happily. This book is very close to perfect, I'm happy to report, and - although this is not the first time I've thought so about a young adult novel - it's hard for me to imagine anyone feeling too grown-up for this story.

Look at this conversation Cynnie has with a new friend from school once she starts to get her life back on track. Cynnie tells her:

"You know how some people are."

"No, how?"

"You know. Some people just don't want to get near anything that might hurt."

"That's everybody. Isn't it?"

"Not really. Some people could have a dog, and then if the dog dies, they get another one. Other people, they say, No, that's it. Too painful. Not going through that again."

"I would get another dog," she said.

"I think I would, too," I said. "Now."

"What changed?"

"Pretty much everything."


Kirkus:
The Year Of My Miraculous Reappearance

Knopf (240 pp.) $15.99, Mar. 27, 2007
ISBN: 0-375-83257-2
The author of Pay It Forward turns her attention to alcoholism in this novel about a girl descending into addiction. Thirteen-year-old Cynnie buries her emotions as she watches her mother drink herself into oblivion every day. Cynnie loves only her mentally retarded, three-year-old brother Bill. When her grandparents come to take Bill away, Cynnie discovers the anesthetic qualities of beer and gin, quickly descending into alcoholism until she kidnaps Bill and races away with him. Arrested, she’s placed on probation and forced into Alcoholics Anonymous. The program works for her, but can it help her mom? By portraying Cynnie realistically but sympathetically, Hyde offers a gritty subject without making the story gritty. Always heartfelt, often suspenseful, the work stays appropriate for its target audience. Few such regeneration books have the capacity to actually reach young people trapped in addiction; this one might. (Fiction. YA)


Booklist:
With an emotionally absent, alcoholic mother whose boyfriends cycle through the house like clockwork, Cynnie, 13, has been the primary caretaker for Bill, her 3-year-old brother, who has Down syndrome. When her grandparents take Bill, Cynnie is devastated. She sneaks a beer for consolation and quickly becomes an alcoholic herself. A potentially deadly mistake eventually leads her to Alcoholics Anonymous. Although some readers will wonder how such destructive behavior could develop so quickly, and the second half of the book occasionally reads like an after-school special about "working the program," earnest Cynnie and her driving need to reconnect with her brother set this above the typical problem novel. Cynnie's love for and devotion to Bill are wholly believable, as are her attempts to snare a stable adult presence in her life. Secondary characters are multidimensional and well drawn. Despite the main character's relatively young age, her maturity and conflicts, as well as the book's engaging tone, will attract older teens craving stories of risk and redemption with a hopeful endings.
-Heather Booth


TEENS READ TOO:
THE YEAR OF MY MIRACULOUS REAPPEARANCE by Catherine Ryan Hyde (also the author of the well-known PAY IT FORWARD) truly illustrates the life of a young teen and her struggle with an alcoholic parent and the ripple-effect of alcoholism.

Cynnie is used to taking care of herself. Not only herself, but also her little brother, Bill, and let's face it, she takes care of her mother, too. Normal life for Cynnie involves cleaning up after her alcoholic mother, making sure one of her many cigarettes doesn't set their house on fire, and tending to her little brother who has Downs Syndrome. Life isn't easy, but it works for Cynnie. Cynnie's only escape is the tree house one of her mother's many passing boyfriends helped her build.

Until one day when her grandparents show up and announce that Bill will be living with them. Bill is Cynnie's only reason for living. When he leaves, she discovers the power of alcohol to erase her pain. She becomes her mother - stumbling through the day under the influence and waking the next day to do it all over again.

Even through her drunken haze, Cynnie knows her only hope lies in getting Bill back into her life. She convinces her friend Snake, a victim of his own father's abuse, to help her rescue Bill so they can all escape to a better life. Unfortunately, their plan collapses when Cynnnie wrecks the car. Everyone recovers from their injuries, but Bill ends up back with their grandparents, and Cynnie finds herself on probation and back home with her drunken mother.

Part of Cynnie's court-ordered punishment includes mandatory attendance at AA meetings. The meetings are at first intimidating, but as Cynnie finally discovers through the help of her sponsor, they offer her a way to push her life in a positive direction. Her goal to eventually reunite with her brother gives Cynnie the determination to overcome her fears.

Hyde takes readers on a roller-coaster ride of emotions as Cynnie battles her mother, her grandparents, and her own personal demons. As in real life, nothing is easy and relapses make life seem hopeless at times. Cynnie's story is straightforward and inspirational.