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This is a story about a boy named Jessie who lives with his family in the countryside.
He likes to draw and has been training all summer to be the fastest runner in school.
The Burke family moves in next door. Their daughter, Leslie, is creative and smart and
becomes Jessie's classmate.
When the big day of the race arrives at school, however, Jessie gets beaten by Leslie. And
at first, no one likes Leslie, but because they are neighbors, they become friends.
Jessie and Leslie begin to form a real friendship around an imaginary land they call Terabithia.
By swinging across the creek on a rope swing, they enter a world where they are king and
queen and go on numerous adventures.
It starts to rain, making it unsafe to travel across the creek, but they continue to travel
to Terabithia anyway.
Jessie is invited to go to a museum with his music teacher that he likes and has a great
time. However, when he returns, he discovers that Leslie had died in the creek.
Jessie is shocked by all of this. Leslie's family moves away and Jessie uses some of
their extra lumber to build a bridge across the creek so that no one will ever fall again.
Despite portraying the power of imagination and the innocence of childhood, this is not
really a children's book as it touches upon various adult-related themes and challenges
many of the social conventions established in society.
First of all, it displays unusual relationships that children may not understand. Of course,
by that fact alone, it does not make the book false or bad, just, shall we say, unique.
For example, the relationship between Jessie and the music teacher is strange. Jessie is
attracted to the teacher and the way the story is written, it seems that the teacher is attracted
to Jessie. Maybe that's just how a boy his age would think, but still, this can confuse
a child.
And while Jessie is at the age where opposite sex attraction is normal, it does make readers
wonder why he isn't infatuated with Leslie a girl his own age, if that was the character
trait that the author wanted to highlight?
Another unusual relationship is between Leslie and her parents. They insist that she call
them by their first names and they don't seem to be parents in the conventional definition
as much as they are her peers.
These unusual relationships challenges the reader's view on what real world relationships
are like. Perhaps the author wanted to let children know that they aren't the only ones
who experience or see these types of relationships.
This story also talks about spirituality, both in the religious aspect and the more
secular one. Leslie goes to Easter service with Jessie's family and after, asks about
God. And while her questions are not provoking, they do tear at paradoxes surrounding the
Christian faith, like God's wrath and how a loving God could also damn His children
to hell.
And of course, there is death. One of the main characters in the story dies. How is
a child supposed to react to this? I mean, really? How do children react to the death
of someone they know? There doesn't seem to be a real answer presented to us from the
author, but maybe the lack of an answer through Jessie's struggles to come to understand his
situation is relatable enough for children.
Many of these adult topics can fly over the heads of children, but nevertheless, they
are still there.
We have adult-child romantic relationships, child abuse, sibling abuse, religion, ***
curiosity, and unconventional parenting all wrapped up within a story about a kid who
likes to draw. Oh, and his best friend dies.