Now that the four abandoned Tillerman children are settled in with their grandmother, Dicey finds that their new beginnings require love, trust, humor, and courage.
Cynthia Voigt is an American author of books for young adults dealing with various topics such as adventure, mystery, racism and child abuse.
Awards: Angus and Sadie: the Sequoyah Book Award (given by readers in Oklahoma), 2008 The Katahdin Award, for lifetime achievement, 2003 The Anne V. Zarrow Award, for lifetime achievement, 2003 The Margaret Edwards Award, for a body of work, 1995 Jackaroo: Rattenfanger-Literatur Preis (ratcatcher prize, awarded by the town of Hamlin in Germany), 1990 Izzy, Willy-Nilly: the Young Reader Award (California), 1990 The Runner: Deutscher Jungenliteraturpreis (German young people's literature prize), 1988 Zilverengriffel (Silver Pen, a Dutch prize), 1988 Come a Stranger: the Judy Lopez Medal (given by readers in California), 1987 A Solitary Blue: a Newbery Honor Book, 1984 The Callender Papers: The Edgar (given by the Mystery Writers of America), 1984 Dicey's Song: the Newbery Medal, 1983
"I have the feeling that I know who I am, only I'm not anymore."
3.5 ⭐️
This was a wonderful second installment to the Tillerman Cycle. When we last left Dicey, James, Maybeth and Sammy - they were beginning new lives, living on their grandmothers farm.
This novel has more focus on the characters themselves, rather than much plot. Which was quite a change from the adventure driven storyline in book 1. It was nonetheless enjoyable, and I loved following the kids as they learned to adjust to life without their mother.
"I'm sorry the world is the way it is and always has been. It's not easy is it? "
Dicey finds it the most difficult out of the family. As her siblings discover who they are and who they want to be, Dicey finds herself lost. If her siblings don't need her like they used to, who is she if she isn't the responsible rock that she has always been for her family?
Lovely book 2 and I am looking forward to continuing the rest of this series.
"Tillerman's have that kind of courage...we have brave spirits."
When I read Homecoming by Cynthia Voigt, I felt like I needed more of the characters because I loved them. That's exactly what I got with the sequel, Dicey's Song. The interactions between the family members are so realistic and filled with love. It's a simple story, but there is so much character growth that develops throughout.
When I was at the library looking at the spine of this book I noticed how well worn and tattered it was,(a sure sign the book has been checked out many times). I began to scratch the back of my head wondering "Do I really want to read this again and run the risk of ruining my image of the book? " I took the plunge anyways and once I started to read again my doubts faded away. This book ALWAYS makes my heart go all fuzzy.
Dicey's song is the sequel to Homecoming (another great read), but I had read this one first and I had no trouble following it. I'm certain must young adult readers would find this book somewhat boring with all these high action books we have now (Don't get me wrong I love reading those too!) Every once in awhile I like reading something that touches what life is all about.
I'm convinced that the Tillerman family is real. When I read this moving story the first time I wanted to be Dicey. You get her and sympathize with her even if she is a little rough around the edges. She cares little about what other people think and strives to do right by her family and herself. Being twelve years old in the book, this is no small feat. She really is wise beyond her years. Every single character is drawn out perfectly. From funny Sammy all the way to tough loving Gram.
I feel the love and the care come from this family through the pages. Voight does all this without using any kind of pretentious language. That's real talent. I have no complaints. Wouldn't change a single word.
My review doesn't even touch the surface of doing it justice.
My friend assures me that Dicey's Song was on several school suggested reading lists and that she read it in ninth grade. Otherwise (well, that and the shiny Newbery medal on the cover), this would have pushed a book off this year's YA/MG book bracket. It's that good.
This is old-school Newbery. This is brilliant. It's warm and empathetic and difficult and real. It's so good that I don't have the words to properly convey my awe. There's this moment, when Dicey's paper is being read aloud and she slowly realizes where that's going, that is one of those perfect reading moments where you're both entirely in the book and fully cognizant of how lucky you are that this exists, that it's been written.
What a cast of characters. What a family. WHAT A BOOK THIS IS. How on EARTH did I miss reading it in high school?
3.5 stars I'm getting a strong opinion that I couldn't just hand over a newer/modern Newberry Medal winner book to my kids at their age without prereading it. This could have been a good read, if not for the mention of sex, French kiss, bossom, which I thought were better left out.
What a wonderful second book in this series. This book reads very easily, it is easy to get into the skin of the characters. They are all likeable for their own quirky things. This novel has more focus on the characters themselves, rather than much plot. Yes, it is a sad book at the end, but it also shows what life could be.
Though I eventually devoured every book in this series, this was the first one I read. I loved these books as a kid - I loved that they didn't feel like books for kids at all. They seemed like "real" books - as opposed to, say, Baby Sitters Club. I love what an odd, believable character Dicey is, that she's a tomboy with a mothering instinct who wants to build boats. These books broke my heart again and again (and I did re-read them all several times.) I love the way the entire series is written, with occasional spotlights thrown on supporting characters. Such a rich world, I almost belive I was there.
A good book that, I suspect, will be a considered slow moving by at least some of its intended audience. Really, it's a book that adults (re: parents) want their children to like as opposed to one they actually will like. Some will get it. Hopefully, others will come back and recognize that the pace is intentional, the plot only suffers from comparison to the (sadly more common) hyperunrealistic stories for teenagers in books and on TV, and that being big and loud aren't always prerequisites--or even desirable elements--for emotional power. A quiet book, for better or worse.
This is quite possible my favorite book. I read it first as a kid, and didn't realize quite how much I idolized the title character, Dicey. She was strong, independent, and different from those around her without caring much. Reading the book as an adult, I realize that Dicey was the character I most had wanted to be like as a kid.
Also cool--other books in the Tillerman Cycle, namely Come a Stranger and A Solitary Blue, tell the story from the points of view of two of Dicey's friends. There are a couple of scenes from Dicey's song that are told from Mina's eyes or Jeff's eyes, which make them interesting reading (and great for a lesson on PoV, if you happen to teach language arts in middle school, like I used to).
I didn’t finish it. Just felt too directionless and the plain writing didn’t pull me in. The plot in the first book, “Homecoming” got me through the plain writing. Kids abandoned in a parking lot by their mother need to find a way to survive on their own. They need to find shelter, scrounge up some money and food, and find long lost relatives. A survival story, with a good basic plot.
This book is the next installment, about children living with their grandmother and starting a new school… and just kind of doing things. Learning piano, helping at the store, doing book reports. Mundane.
The stilted dialogues didn’t help. If I read this book at a much younger age I would probably enjoy it more but I made it half way and didn’t feel like reading more.
Holy cow! An almost perfect book, this explores how a girl and her family struggle to belong in a new town and with brand new circumstances. This is a must read.
Really excellent. If I would have known how good it was going to be, I would have gone ahead and read the first book before reading this one. I'm just working through the Newbery winners and in the interest of getting the list done sometime soon I decided to skip earlier books in series.
Dicey's Song was a contemporary fiction back in the early 80's when it won the Newbery. If you are looking for pop references though, you will not really find them in this book. At the end of the book, the kids are getting ready to try their first pizza. Man, I remember that! Back in the early 80's, there were still people who had never tried pizza. I was something like 7 years old the first time my parents got us a pizza. My mom had tried to make us pizza before that, but, it was just spaghetti sauce with cheese on bread dough. A good attempt, but, this was the age before the internet. They got a pepperoni pizza and I still remember being shocked by how amazing it was.
Anyways, I digress. This book is somewhat about mental illness, Dicey's mom is at a hospital far away in a catatonic state. The first book was apparently about their journey to their grandmother's house after their mom abandoned them. This second book does fill in enough detail where you don't have to read the first one, but, I was left wishing that I had. They are a family of oddball characters, some prone to fighting, some with learning disabilities and a grandmother who is the town's strange character.
Parents will appreciate the 'be yourself' message. There's no romance in the book, but, you are left with the idea that there will be in future books. Dicey is a great character, she's self-sufficient and complex. She both wants alone time but also feels some discomfort when her siblings need her less. She doesn't want friends or connections but, then realizes that she shouldn't hold people at arms length. She learns this from her Grandmother's mistakes with a childhood friend.
I didn't really pick up on anything problematic in this book. Grandma tries to initiate a talk about the 'birds and the bees' and Dicey stops her, tells her what she already knows and says she will ask when she's ready to hear more.
I really liked the home ec class portions. The teacher is a bit of a witch, but, there is one speech in there that is just great. Dicey didn't want to take home ec, she wanted to take mechanical drafting but there wasn't room for her in the class which Dicey knows is partly due to gender bias, boys take drafting and girls take home ec. The teacher makes a point that everyone should learn home ec and she laments that more boys don't take the class because it's information that everyone needs. I really feel that a lot of parents have done their boys a disservice by not insisting on some skill in that area.
A lot of award winning children's books are more fun for adults to read, but, I feel like Dicey's Song would be appealing to children who like an emotional adventure.
now that "Homecoming" got me "stuck" on/in a series, and invested in a couple of characters, i HAD to read this one!
in a way, i'm sorry i did, as it took me down some roads i did NOT need to go down. then again, tho ...
i'm REALLY glad i DID read this. first of all, ya know that saying, "out of the mouth of babes"? well ...
this book falls into that category, sort of. guess you have to change the old adage, tho, to "out of the mouth FOR babes", since the book was originally intended for teens. BUT ...
like the first one, from this book ANYONE can learn something valuable. do you realize that the majority of families are NOT actually "functional", but "dysfunctional", and VERY so?! it's true, i think. that's what i learned from this book. granted, it's a sad fact, but then again ...
it's not. as, since most of us are/were "dysfunctional", it's nice to know that we aren't/weren't alone. ya know, "misery loves company" kind of thing (very "cliche" this morning, aren't i?!), which then means, our (those of us who are/were dysfunctional) lives weren't as bad as we thought. IF that makes any sense??? guess you'd have to be wearing the same "shoes" to understand!!! anyway ...
the "road" it took me down made me cry, and BUCKETS of tears, BUT ...
it was a GOOD and VERY cleansing cry, and i learned some valuable lessons, that HOPEFULLY, i can put into play.
ok, i'm off to steal the 3rd book in the series from that bratty daughter of mine that got me hooked on this blasted thing! 8^)
This second book in the series was easier for me to get involved in more quickly, and the shorter page-length benefited the story. I really enjoyed seeing the Tillerman’s getting acquainted with their new home and seeing how Dicey adjusted to her changing role. They are a fun family to read about.
The Tillerman children struggle to settle into their new home. The first book in this series (Homecoming) was, like most books about children surviving on their own, insular and quietly escapist; their reintegration into normal life doesn't have that indulgent tone--but both books hinge on Dicey's ability to know, love, and benevolently manipulate her family members, and that competency and problem-solving is satisfying. There are some clunky conflicts in the middle third between Dicey and authority figures, but the protracted conflict of overcoming trauma to establish bonds of trust is more nuanced and engaging.
Then the book takes a turn in the final third when The ending worked for me as much as didn't, but still drags down my final impression of an otherwise compelling, quiet novel with a cogent central theme.
I would also give this a solid 4.5 stars. I wished it was longer. I loved following Dicey, getting to know Gram better and seeing more of the other siblings too. This book had less action than "Homecoming", but still was just as gripping. I can't wait to read the rest! Addition: After finishing the rest of the series, I was disappointed nothing happened with Dicey searching for her Uncle John. I wish this would've happened! They might have cousins they've never met. It would be good for Gram to have closure on this!
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
In Dicey's Song, the Tillerman children are learning to call Chrisfield home. It's a transition that comes with some bumps along the way. I just love the feel of Cynthia Voigt's Tillerman Cycle. The cadence of the writing; the introspection of Dicey. There's a certain nostalgic quality to these books that may be because they remind me of the books I read as a child or it may be that the nostalgia is built in. Perhaps it's both. Cynthia Voigt is so good at mixing sweetness and sorrow. I finished the book feeling all melancholy.
I really love all the characters in this book. Gram continues to be a favorite, but I really enjoyed the new characters that were introduced in this novel too. The characters' voices are so strong. They feel so very authentic. The fact that the book is set on the Eastern Shore doesn't hurt either. I like feeling like I have a personal connection to the series.
Like the first in the Tillerman cycle, 'Homecoming,' I revisited 'Dicey's Song' on compact disc. Like 'Homecoming,' that auditory revisiting was perhaps even more gratifying than the completely satisfying initial read. Barbara Caruso is especially impressive as narrator here because the character of Gram is so much more central to the story. Caruso absolutely nails Gram's voice.
You might not have to have read 'Homecoming' to appreciate 'Dicey's Song' but it certainly would help. The first book ends after the Tillerman children, shepherded by their thirteen-year-old oldest sister, the incomparable Dicey, finish their homeless summer odyssey by finding their absent mother's childhood home, run-down and comforting. It's a rambling old farmhouse on Cheasapeake Bay, on a worn-down old farm ruled over by Gram, their acerbic, laconic, and, surprisingly, comforting grandmother.
The journey to the farm unquestionably sets up this recounting of the autumn and winter that follow--the Tillerman children and their grandmother settling in with each other, and with the town and schools of Crisfield, Maryland. It definitely enriched my understanding of Dicey's struggles with home ec and English teachers in her first year of high school.
As in 'Homecoming,' though, Voigt fills in the tale with such rich characterization and sharp observation, that 'Dicey's Song' can stand alone as the intensely resonant novel it is.
If 'Homecoming' is about the Tillerman children's encounters with strangers, 'Dicey's Song' is about the children and their grandmother making deeper connections. As Gram says, 'holding on.' Besides getting to know Dicey, James, Maybeth, Sammy and Gram better, we are introduced to grocer Millie Tydings and piano teacher Isaac Lingerle, adults who surprise the reader with their depth of empathy and understanding, as well as Dicey's musical admirer, Jeff Greene, and her emerging friend, the vibrant Wilhelmina Smiths, who fairly leaps off the pages to grab your attention--and Dicey's.
Especially relevant in this new chapter of the Tillerman children's lives for me, because I help kids in exactly this area, were Maybeth's difficulties with learning how to read. Ten-year-old James's analysis of how Maybeth has been taught and what might be a better course is as incisive a condemnation of whole language, the dominant pedagogy of the novel's 80s timeframe, and insightful an understanding of dyslexia, as I just read in neuroscientist Stanislas Dehaene's 'Reading in the Brain.'
Learning to read is just one of the fascinating thematic threads that Voigt weaves into her sumptuous story. It's an absolutely wonderful book for children and adults that starts with a story that just ended and ends with a story that is just beginning.
Great book, maybe a little too long. The story could have been really pathetic and sorry-for-itself, but it wasn't like that at all. I do want to read the others in the series now--I didn't realize there were so many; I'd only heard of the first three. But WHAT a dreadful cover--looks like it belongs to exactly the kind of book this isn't (the pathetic-and-sorry one).
I really tried to like this book. I forced myself to trudge through each banal page. I cut and ran after 50 of them. I know this book won a Newberry, but I guess it was the 80s and there wasn't a whole lot of quality children's literature to nominate.
Oh, I just love these. I think I also read the next one, A Solitary Blue, as a kid too, though I don't remember it anymore. Regardless, I'm gonna have to read all of these now. Such good character development and a truly engaging story of a family. Yay.
I really enjoyed this book. It was a nice realistic fiction. It was about a girl named Dicey Tilderman. She and her siblings, James, Sammy, and Maybeth, moved into her Grams house because her mom was in a mental hospital. Dicey found this boat in her Gram's barn so she decided to work on it so that way she and her siblings can use it next spring. Dicey got a job down at the town store, with Millie who owned the store, made an agreement that she can have a job if she draws in more customers in the next week. She succeeds with that so she was able to keep the job. She also gave her siblings an allounce with the money that she made. They started school, Dicey and her siblings were doing fine. Everyone except Maybeth. Dicey and James were concerned about Maybeth because she might inherit something bad from their mother. So James and Dicey were trying to help her with her studies by teaching her a different way. Then later on Maybeth came home with a note coming from her music teacher, which is the only class that she isn't failing, saying that she should practice piano more because there is a lot of potentials that she sees. With Dicey's money that she makes she pays for Maybeth's piano practice. One day when Dicey was going to work from school she met this one person named Jack, a 19-year-old, who plays the guitar. Ever since then she saw him every day after school and became really good friends with him. One day he asks her to the dance but she denies and he said that he will ask her next year. Gram brings Dicey to the mall one day and she and Dicey shopped and picked out some clothing, and fabric to buy, they had a good time. Then one day, Gram received a letter about their moma. She and Dicey flew over to Bostin where her mother is, to find out that she is dying, and soon going to die. Later that afternoon, after Dicey visited her mother, she went Christmas shopping to buy her siblings some gifts. The next day, her mother has died, so they had her cremated. Once they buried her in their yard when they came back, Dicey knew that she had to let go. A really good book. Recommended for those who like a historical setting, and realistic fiction.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
4.5 stars. I hope to read all the Newbery award winners from the year I was born this summer, and this was first of the ones I had not yet read. I loved it. This has the beginnings of a coming of age story, but only takes place over the course of one autumn. I did not read book 1 in This trilogy, which occurred during the previous summer to this book, but that was fine. I could easily follow what was happening. One storyline dealt with Diceys little sister struggling to read using the latest sight word teaching method, and how they went back and taught her phonics and it worked so much better. It was extremely sad and amusing at the same time. That was about as preachy as anything t got in this book. Mostly a lot of questions and not necessarily answers to them, but I usually love that in a story. I have never read Cynthia Voight that I remember and I look forward to reading more. I enjoyed her writing, and she tells an engaging story.
Some of my favorite Newbery books are from the 1980s (Jacob have I loved and A Ring of Endless Light I read multiple times in middle/high school and loved them.) and they deal with very similar elements of sadness and questioning and growing up. I also enjoyed The Hero and the Crown and the Blue Sword (another 1983 winner)but those are very different and I did not read them until I was much older.
I would classify this as a YA book now. There are a few mentions of a girl growing up, menstruating and needing a bra, but especially the extreme challenges of having a mentally ill mother seem better suited to an older audience.
I was really blown away by this book. The story is quiet and timeless, and I love to read stories about kids dealing with real hardship, rather than the watered-down "problems" you so often see.
This book's greatest strength is character development. We're dealing with a rather large cast of protagonists here--all four Tillerman children and their grandmother--as well as several significant supporting characters, and they are all beautifully fleshed out. Their motives are diverse and believable, and their reactions to trauma vary accurately from one to the next. Voigt does an incredible job of capturing the ambivalence of sibling relationships and the difficulty of getting to know oneself again after a time of transition. I think that late-blooming kids of all genders could relate to Dicey, whose experiences have made her wise prematurely in some areas, but whose body and interests were somewhat stunted in the process. I know I would have liked to read about a girl who, like I did, went around in overalls with no shirt until almost high school.
Overall, this is a complex and sensitively rendered story--I wish I had read it growing up.
Heart-wrenching and beautiful. An elementary school teacher read Homecoming aloud to my class, and it's a book that has stayed with me for thirty years, yet for some reason I never read any other books by Cynthia Voigt. Now, picking up the story of Dicey, her siblings, and their grandmother, I'm struck by how deeply I wanted the characters to find happiness. As you read, you just wish you could help Dicey open herself up to the people who want to befriend her. Every time she resists, you wish you could explain to her what she's missing. It's ultimately satisfying to see her growth, while knowing that the road ahead of her will remain difficult.
I wasn't looking forward to this one because all I remembered about having read it as a teenager was that I found it boring and sad. It may be the kind of book that makes people say the Newbery rewards books that adults love rather than books that young people love, but I am just glad this poignant, thoughtful book exists, and that it's award made me read it. Some of these problem books have worked better with my family as read alouds, where you discuss as you go, rather than pleasure reads for the kids. Not every good book for young people has to be one that most children would pick up and appreciate on their own.
Another great book in this series. I feel happy for these kids, for all the people in this book actually. Unlike the first book in the series that was fraught with survival and hardship, this was more with the remnants of that on these children's lives and the new hardships they faced in adapting to a new family and lifestyle. Although we still don't really know what affliction their mom suffered from, at least we now have a resolution to her part of the story.
I look forward to the rest of this series and would highly recommend it.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.