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When Icy Sparks was published in 1998, the New York Times Book Review called it “vivid and unforgettable” and praised author Gwyn Hyman Rubio as “a writer of uncommonly warm and tender vision.” The novel, Rubio’s first, centers on Tourette’s syndrome and its effects on a young girl growing up in Eastern Kentucky in the 1950s. Narrated by its now-grown protagonist, the story begins as Icy, a 10-year-old orphan living with devoted grandparents, experiences the first symptoms of the rare neurological disorder, which is characterized by involuntary jerking and cursing. Soon her bizarre outbursts make her an outcast at school and in her community. The book traces how Icy and those who love her learn to accept and understand her condition. In the process, Icy herself becomes a woman of unusual compassion and ability.
Watch the program (Windows Media® or RealPlayer® format)
Card catalog listing from the Library of Congress
Blurbs from the book cover
Oprah’s Book Club selection—announced March 8, 2001
Amazon.com description page with reviews by Kentucky readers
Wild Child—New York Times book review, August 16, 1998 (Access requires free registration.)
Chapter 1 at the New York Times site (Access requires free registration.)
Transcript of bookclub@ket program
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