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Formats
Ebook Details
  • 06/2021
  • B097CWHWVV
  • 456 pages
  • $6.99
Paperback Details
  • 06/2021
  • 979-8519240178
  • 465 pages
  • $16.99
Sparrows
Rose Betit, author

Adult; General Fiction (including literary and historical); (Market)

Get ready for all the feels!

Sparrows takes you on a roller coaster ride of emotion, immersing you in the semi-autobiographical coming-of-age story of young Isabelle.

How will she navigate suffering through constant abject poverty, experiencing monumental loss, and being a witness to violence and racial injustice? How will she make sense of a world that doesn't seem to have a lot of sense?

Hard hitting and raw, yet, somehow laced with moments of laugh-out-loud humor and unexpected joy, the story is filled with life lessons you didn’t even know you needed.


**************
It’s 1972 and Isabelle is four years old. She, her eight-year-old brother, and their mother are grappling with yet another harsh Maine winter under crushing poverty. With their father absent, their mother takes the children South to Georgia to be near her family. Their extreme economic hardship continues as residents of a public housing complex in Albany. Their lives become juxtaposed with the phenomenon of “White Flight” as they, a Caucasian family, remain and become a neighborhood minority living among a societal minority. The predominately white world outside the public housing development is largely unknown to Isabelle and her siblings. Meanwhile, those with whom they most identify (the children in “The Projects”) reject them or directly take their frustrations out on them. Subsequently, Isabelle struggles to figure out where she belongs.
That is, until she becomes best friends with Evelyn, a Black girl who moves in across the driveway. Their friendship blossoms and flies in the face of typical racial attitudes of the day. They become each other’s lifeline and hope in an environment rife with adversity.
Soon, however, the friends are confronted with an earth-shattering event that completely changes Isabelle’s view of the world.
**************

Content Advisory

Please be aware:

While Sparrows is a semi-autobiographical work of fiction, it was inspired in large part by disconcerting real-life situations (involving blatant and less blatant racism, violence, child abuse, and allusion to sexual assault).
Some readers may find some scenarios disturbing or perhaps even triggering.

Reviews
Goodreads

This gem was my 75th book of the year. Sometimes you just come across a book that literally touches you all the way to your soul, and for me, that is exactly what this book did. I laughed, I cried, and felt every emotion in between. I have already recommended this book to my sister, and I hope that other people out there find it as beautifully moving as I did. I could relate to Isabelle in so many ways, especially where childhood poverty was concerned. This book is a beautiful tragedy full of life lessons, and I believe that it should be required reading in all schools. This is my favorite book that I have read in 2021.
 

Goodreads

Heart wrenching yet beautiful story about a young girl growing up in poverty in the southeastern United States. Some of the scenes will stay with you for a long time.

Goodreads

What an emotional rollercoaster of a read. A well crafted story which takes you along with our protagonist Isabelle as she grows from a child to a caring young adult. The descriptions of her life of grinding poverty and the surrounding casual cruelty are both heartbreaking and eye opening. The characters are drawn from real life and you live through their despair and triumphs. This book is both heartbreaking and reaffirming; a tricky skill to bring off but Betit pulls it off. 100% recommend.

Goodreads

I loved this book!

This novel will tear you up with its hopelessness, but in the midst of all that sadness a glimmer of hope will come shining through!

News
05/20/2022
Real-life poverty is driving force of Albany writer Rose Betit's first novel

"Rose Betit’s debut novel “Sparrows” is a work some 20 years in the making. But the harrowing story of a family growing up poor in Albany, Georgia, took a lifetime of living for Betit to tell the tale.

“Sparrows” is categorized by people who feel it is their duty to make such characterizations as fiction. But read the heart-breaking horror of a destitute family going to bed hungry most nights and listen to Betit talk about her very real childhood that mirrors that of the Letourneau family, and it’s easy to see that the Letourneaus are a fictionalized version of the Cody family that made its way to Albany from Maine in 1968 in search of some sense of stability.

“I call the book semi-autobiographical, but it’s about 75% straight-up autobiography,” Betit said in a phone conversation. “About 25% of the book is fabricated, but most of the stories happened to me or to people I know. I didn’t really take a great deal of artistic license.

“A lot of the characters are composites of people I know, and I did want to respect my siblings’ privacy. There were things I really wasn’t sure I wanted to put out there, plus I thought there would be a great deal of vulnerability if everything was true. And I’m a writer; I wanted the freedom to create, to make some stuff up.”

“Sparrows” is the story of the Letourneau family — Mom Jolene, brothers Stevie and Joseph, and middle child Isabelle, the narrator of the story — but for the most part, it’s the story of the very real Cody family as they fought the daily struggle for survival. Betit tells of that struggle with alarming detail, the imagery too haunting to have been the figment of some writer’s imagination.

“Some of it was painful to write,” the author says as she talks about how the two families’ — one fiction, one all too real — stories overlap. “Those details of being perpetually hungry, that was traumatic. That’s not something you ever forget.

“I did want to show people, up-close and personal, how hunger gnaws at a person. That part in the book where Isabelle fills her stomach with water so it would feel like she was full ... that was true. That happened to me. We all had so many days that we went without a proper meal.”

The tragedy of “Sparrows” is universal and will resonate with any reader who allows him- or herself to relate to these characters. But the book will strike many a familiar nerve for residents in and around Albany, who will recognize local landmarks and characters whose plight mirrors that of the Letourneaus.

When Betit — who “didn’t know what the heck to do in Albany?” — returned to her native Maine, a single mom with her own two kids in tow, she earned a degree in French and taught the language for students from Pre-K to high school. But, she said, “I always wanted to write.”

She started working on “Sparrows” around 2000, and was, she said, on a roll when 9-11 happened.

“I don’t know how to explain how that affected me,” she said. “I think I was in shock; I didn’t write for a long time. I thought at the time — and this may sound a little hippy-dippy, but it’s how I felt — that maybe my creative muse had left me.”

It was eight years later before Betit, after a few unsuccessful fits and starts, found her creativity and hunger to write again.

“I’d been reading a lot of poetry, and I went to school to get a creative writing degree,” she said. “The kids were young when I started back writing, but I was excited to be at it again.”

Betit landed a job writing about real Estate for the Montreal Gazette, but she lost that job when the pandemic took hold. She decided there was “no better time” to polish up and put the finishing touches on the book that had consumed her life off and on for the better part of two decades.

As she worked to get the final edit ready — which happened in June of 2021 — “Sparrows” turned into something of a family project.

“My son (Joshua Betit) became like my manager/editor ... he read, edited and made suggestions,” Betit said. “It was his idea to add what was maybe the lone surreal element to the book when Isabelle — on Page 427 — gets on a transit bus and in something of a glitch in the time-space continuum, crossed paths with the real me and my real family. It turned out to be a really cool concept.

“My daughter (Hannah Betit) came up with what would be the design for the front and back covers.”

Betit did not seek a publisher for “Sparrows,” choosing instead to self-publish.

“I didn’t bother to consider the traditional way of publishing,” she said. “I didn’t want to have to make the cuts they’d want for the book to be more palatable. I decided to bypass the gatekeepers and just put it out and see what happens.”

Betit admits that Isabelle is indeed based upon herself, and that Stevie is based on her real-life big brother Phil Cody (an ad sales representative for The Albany Herald). Isabelle’s best friend Evelyn is a composite of Betit’s sister Celeste and one of her childhood friends, and baby brother Joseph from “Sparrows” is a composite of her real-life brothers Christopher and Timothy, all of whom show up in that time-space glitch in the book.

About mom “Jolene,” Betit writes in “Sparrows,” “At the Hasty House, Mama hardly brings home enough tips for anything. When the food stamps run out, Mama takes us to the Pac-A-Sac and we wait while she talks to the man named Allen that’s the cashier man and she asks him if we can have some credit. She’ll pay him back in whatever way she can, she says to him and winks. He says maybe they can work something out and tells us we can have $5.00 in store credit.”

“My mom passed away about 18 years or so ago, and when I think about here now, there is no resentment for how we grew up,” Betit said. “I feel a lot of compassion for her.”

With “Sparrows” officially under her belt, and getting favorable reviews, Betit has embarked on several other projects. She’s working on “Sidewalk Stories,” a collection of short stories; expects to release the children’s book “Maisie and Moe the Extra Extraordinary Bassets of Court Street;” is thinking over turning different chapters of “Sparrows” into standalone novellas, and is even considering a prequel to her novel called “Bird’s Eye.”

As for response to her first novel, Betit admits she’s “proud” of her accomplishment.

“It took me a while to believe it was good enough,” she said. “But people close to me said they liked it, I started to get some excellent reviews and I even won a couple of awards. I’m not boastful at all, but I’ve finally started to believe that it’s actually good. I’m a tough critic, but I can admit that I like it.”

Ebook and paperback copies of “Sparrows” are available at amazon.com.

Formats
Ebook Details
  • 06/2021
  • B097CWHWVV
  • 456 pages
  • $6.99
Paperback Details
  • 06/2021
  • 979-8519240178
  • 465 pages
  • $16.99
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