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One Plus One Equals Blue

by MJ Auch
ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Twelve year-old Basil knows he's special—he's been associating numbers with colors since he was a kid. His gift (or curse) has turned him into somewhat of a loner, but his world begins to change when he meets Tenzie, the new girl in school who has similar freakisms. She, too, has synesthesia (a condition in which one type of stimulation evokes the sensation of another). At first, Basil is somewhat annoyed with Tenzie's pushiness, but after Basil's estranged mother returns, his life is turned upside down . . . and Tenzie may be the only person to help him put it back together again.
Once again, MJ Auch has written a thoughtful coming-of-age novel that explores friendship, family, and fitting in, in One Plus One Equals Blue.

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    • Kirkus

      March 1, 2013
      Basil and Tenzie both have synesthesia, either a gift or a curse that can make a person into one of life's rejects. For Basil, new to public school from a lifetime of home schooling and previously unaware that not everyone sees numbers as colors, synesthesia just confirms him as a freak. He embraces that status, sitting alone and avoiding his classmates. Tenzie has just moved to town and started at the middle school as well. At first, she seems to have a peculiar and charming resilience that makes her impervious to others' attitudes. Readers--and first-person narrator Basil--only gradually discover that she's much more vulnerable than she first appears. After Carly, Basil's feckless mother, returns from a five-year absence in Hollywood, Basil is appropriately wary. Tenzie, though, ignored by her parents, falls victim to Carly's dysfunctional attention when the young woman takes over production of the school play. The two seventh-graders and Basil's attentive, custodial grandmother are sensitively portrayed, but Basil's voice leaves other characters, especially Carly, only broadly sketched. Her inner workings remain a mystery--just as they are to her bewildered and rejected son. Synesthesia provides an initial bond between Basil and Tenzie, offering a minor subplot, but is never the focus of the tale. An engaging coming-of-age story marked by the somewhat predictable dysfunctional-parent problems that are so common in the type. (Fiction. 11-14)

      COPYRIGHT(2013) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • School Library Journal

      April 1, 2013

      Gr 5-8-Basil has just started seventh grade after being homeschooled by his hippie-era grandmother. At first he thinks he wants to make friends with other students, but he soon decides that he is just too freaky and different to ever have any friends. In October, when Tenzie shows up at school, everything changes. She is pushy and determined to befriend Basil, whether he likes it or not. When he finds out that Tenzie sees numbers as colors, too, he is prompted to do some research. He discovers that they both have the same neurological condition, only Tenzie's synesthesia helps her with math, whereas Basil's makes him hopelessly confused. Life gets topsy-turvy when Basil's mother, who abandoned him seven years earlier, shows up in town. Basil is wary of Carly, but Tenzie is enamored-the woman is beautiful, glamorous, and claims to be an actress. When she abruptly leaves town once again, Tenzie convinces Basil to run away with her and find Carly. The kids go on a harrowing journey only to discover that everything they need is back home. Synesthesia is an important bond between Basil and Tenzie, and readers are led to believe that the condition is going to be more central to the plot, but this is primarily an engaging story of a boy coming to terms with the shortcomings of his mother. It's a nice companion to Wendy Mass's A Mango-Shaped Space (Little, Brown, 2003), which also incorporates synesthesia.-Ragan O'Malley, Saint Ann's School, Brooklyn, NY

      Copyright 2013 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      March 15, 2013
      Grades 5-8 Twelve-year-old Basil is a loner, probably because of his freakism of mentally associating numbers with different colors. Then capital-Q quirky Tenzie ( her personality was like the brass section of a band ) arrives at school and befriends himshe won't take no for an answer. Soon Tenzie reveals that she, too, sees colors in her mind. It's a rather stiff start for the novelit seems unlikely that neither kid would have searched the Internet to learn about synesthesia before meeting each other, and there's a didactic quality to description of the condition. Thankfully, a plot emerges with the arrival of Basil's mother, Carly, who disappeared seven years ago to try to make it in Hollywood. Carly is a rich character: charismatic, full of good intent, and quick to excite, but lacking the ability to follow anything through. It's easy to see the attraction she holds for both kidsas well as the disappointment that surely is coming. Though slow to start, this sensitive novel has a fittingly tough and bittersweet finish.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2013, American Library Association.)

    • The Horn Book

      July 1, 2013
      Twelve-year-old Basil, who has synesthesia (he associates numbers with colors), learns that the new girl, Tenzie, has the same "freakism" as he does. He's lived happily with hippie-artist Gram ever since his mother left when he was five, and when she reappears for a surprise visit, life gets complicated. Character development is uneven, but Basil and Tenzie's realistic friendship adds interest.

      (Copyright 2013 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

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Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:4.4
  • Lexile® Measure:690
  • Interest Level:4-8(MG)
  • Text Difficulty:3

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