YAdudebooks review Johnny

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YAdudebooks’ Mark David Smith gave Letters From Johnny a four out of five-star review.

The book trailer for Letters From Johnny was also ranked number 5 in their Best Book Trailer list for May 2021.

The review is reproduced below from YAdudebooks.ca

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YAdudebooks

Letters From Johnny by Wayne Ng, Guernica Editions

I like this book. I didn’t think I would at first. The story is told by Johnny through a series of letters assigned by his teacher, first to a pen pal and later to hockey legend Dave Keon. As an eleven-year-old, Johnny’s writing skills aren’t very well developed when the book opens, and all of his errors are kept intact for readers. About his neighbour, Rollie, Johnny writes, “He rents a room beside us except we have the biggest room in the house and we share the washroom and the kitchen with him and two younivercidy univercidy students in the rooms down stairs.” As an English teacher, I had to curb the desire to get my red pen out right then and there.

The run-on sentences, misspellings, lack of punctuation around dialogue, and awkward constructions slowed my reading at first; however, those errors also became part of the book’s charm. Johnny writes like an actual eleven-year-old. Before long I found that I had grown accustomed to his style, and that he had a recognizable voice. And, of course, Johnny’s writing improves. Like Flowers for Algernon, his language use becomes gradually clearer and more sophisticated as he writes, noting that even though Rollie hates writing, “He should try. It is not so hard.”

The book also doesn’t shy away from uncomfortable situations among its characters: Johnny’s mother’s alcoholism, his father’s extramarital relationship, his principal’s smoldering bigotry and his attempts to find his place in a Canada that sends mixed messages about belonging. Apprehended while slumbering in an Eaton’s store, Johnny is offered a Kit Kat bar by one of the employees: “[He] said it is no egg roll or chop suey but its good eh. I think he was trying to be nice and funny but it was not.” What we get from Johnny is a confusing jumble of complexities for a boy coming of age without the safety and guidance we all wish for our children. In other words, a real life.

Letters From Johnny is ideally suited for readers from ages eight to ten, though some older readers may be drawn in by their connection to Johnny’s family complications, their empathy for the struggles of first-generation Canadians or, as in my case, by their own sense of nostalgia for those halcyon, cellphone-free days.

– M.D.S.