Author: Catherine Ryan Hyde
Translator: Kyong-hee Kong
Publisher: Tteu-in-dol
356pages | 210*153mm
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>>>This book is written in Korean only. |
About This Book
Catherine Ryan Hyde's Pay It Forward takes as its premise the
bumper-sticker phrase "Think Globally, Act Locally" and builds a novel
around it. The hero of her story is young Trevor McKinney, a 12-year-old
whose imagination is sparked by an extra-credit assignment in Social
Studies: "Think of an idea for world change, and put it into action."
Trevor's idea is deceptively simple: do a good deed for three people,
and in exchange, ask each of them to "pay it forward" to three more. "So
nine people get helped. Then those people have to do twenty-seven....
Then it sort of spreads out." Trevor's early attempts to get his project
off the ground seem to end in failure: a junkie he befriends ends up
back in jail; an elderly woman whose garden he tends dies unexpectedly.
But even after the boy has given up on his plan, his acts of kindness
bear unexpected fruit, and soon an entire movement is underway and
spreading across America.
Trevor, meanwhile, could use a little help himself. His father walked
out on the family, and his mother, Arlene, is fighting an uphill battle
with alcoholism, poor judgment in men, and despair. When the boy's new
Social Studies teacher, Reuben St. Clair, arrives on the scene, Trevor
sees in him not only a source of inspiration for how to change the
world, but also the means of altering his mother's life. Yet Reuben has
his own set of problems. Horribly scarred in Vietnam, he is reluctant to
open himself up to the possibility of rejection--or love. Indeed, the
relationship between Arlene and Reuben is central to the novel as these
two damaged people learn to "pay forward" the trust and affection Trevor
has given them.
Hyde tells her tale from many different perspectives, using letters,
diary entries, and first- and third-person narratives from the various
people whose lives Trevor's project touches. Jerry Busconi, for example,
the addict Trevor tried to help, one night finds himself talking a young
woman out of jumping off the Golden Gate Bridge:
I'm a junkie, Charlotte. I'm always gonna be a junkie. I ain't never
gonna be no fine, upstanding citizen. But then I thought, hell. Just pay
it forward anyway. Kid tried to help me. Okay, it didn't work. Still,
I'm trying to help you. Maybe you'll jump. I don't know. But I tried,
right? But let me tell you one thing. I woke up one morning and somebody
gave me a chance. Just outta nowhere. It was like a miracle. Now, how do
you know that won't happen to you tomorrow?
Pay It Forward is reminiscent of Frank Capra's
classic It's a Wonderful Life. Like the film, this novel has a steely
core of gritty reality beneath its optimism: yes, one person can make a
difference, can help to make the world a better place, but sickness,
pain, heartache, and tragedy will still always be a part of the human
condition. If at times Hyde stumbles a bit while negotiating the
razor-thin line between honest feeling and sentimentality, it's
generally not for long. And the occasional lapse into artificially
colored emotion can be forgiven when weighed against the courage it
takes to write so unabashedly hopeful a story in such cynical times.
--Sheila Bright
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