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The illustrated mum / Jacqueline Wilson ; illustrated by Nick Sharratt.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublisher: London, England : Corgi Yearling, 2017Copyright date: ©2000Description: 222 pages : illustrations ; 23 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 0385408889
  • 9780440867814
  • 0440863686 (pbk.)
Subject(s): Awards:
  • Guardian Children's Fiction Award 2000 Winner.
Summary: I think Marigold's the most bright, beautiful Mum in the world. She's totally covered in tattoos, she had a new one done for her birthday. Most people think she's a dreadful mother. Even my big sister gets cross when she forgets to buy food or pay the bills. But I know Marigold loves us and she never means to stay out all night and leave us on our own.
Fiction notes: Click to open in new window
Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Childrens Fiction Davis (Central) Library Children's Fiction Children's Fiction WILS Checked out 13/04/2024 T00807079
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

A poignant and amusing tale of the many faces of family relationships.

First Doubleday edition published in 1999.

I think Marigold's the most bright, beautiful Mum in the world. She's totally covered in tattoos, she had a new one done for her birthday. Most people think she's a dreadful mother. Even my big sister gets cross when she forgets to buy food or pay the bills. But I know Marigold loves us and she never means to stay out all night and leave us on our own.

Guardian Children's Fiction Award 2000 Winner.

Suitable 13 years and upwards

Excerpt provided by Syndetics

Marigold started going weird again on her birthday. Star remembered that birthdays were often bad times so we'd tried really hard. Star made her a beautiful big card cut into the shape of a marigold. She used up all the ink in the orange felt-tip coloring it in. Then she did two sparkly silver threes with her special glitter pen and added "Happy Birthday" in her best italic writing. They do calligraphy in Year Eight and she's very good at it. I'm still in elementary school and I'm useless at any kind of writing so I just drew on my card. As it was Marigold's thirty-third birthday I decided I'd draw her thirty-three most favorite things. I drew Micky (I'd never seen him but Marigold had described him enough times) and Star and me. Then I drew the Rainbow Tattoo Studio and the Victoria Arms and the Nightbirds club. I did them in the middle all clumped together and then round the edges I drew London and the seaside and the stars at night. My piece of paper was getting seriously crowded by this time but I managed to cram in a CD player with lots of Emerald City CDs and some high heels and a bikini and jeans and different-colored tight tops and lots of rings and bangles and earrings. I was getting a bit stuck for ideas by this time and I'd rubbed out so often that the page was getting furry so I gave up and colored it in. I wanted to do a pattern of marigolds as a border but Star had used up the orange already, so I turned the marigolds into roses and colored them crimson. Red roses signify love. Marigold was very into symbols so I hoped she'd understand. We gave her presents too. Star found a remixed version of Emerald City's greatest hits for only $2 at the Saturday morning market. I bought her a sparkly hair clasp, green to match her eyes. We even bought a special sheet of green tissue paper and a green satin ribbon to wrap up the presents. "Do you think she'll like them?" I asked Star. "You bet," said Star. She took the hair clasp and opened it up so its plastic claws looked like teeth. "I am a great present," she made it say, and then it bit the tip of my nose. Marigold gave us both big hugs and said we were darlings but her great green eyes filled with tears. "So why are you crying?" I said. "She's crying because she's happy," said Star. "Aren't you, Marigold?" "Mm," said Marigold. She sniffed hard and wiped her eyes with the back of her hand. She was shaking but she managed a smile. "There. I've stopped crying now, Dol, OK?" It wasn't OK. She cried on and off all day. She cried when she listened to the Emerald City CD because she said it reminded her of old times. She cried when I combed her hair out specially and twisted it up into a chic plait with her new green clasp. "God, look at my neck! It's getting all wrinkly," she said. She touched the taut white skin worriedly while we did our best to reassure her. "I look so old." "You're not old at all. You're young," said Star. "Thirty-three," Marigold said gloomily. "I wish you hadn't written that right slap bang in the middle of your card, darling. I can't believe thirty-three. That was the age Jesus was when he died, did you know that?" Marigold knew lots about the Bible because she was once in a church home. "Thirty-three," she kept murmuring. "He tried so hard too. He liked kids, he liked bad women, he stuck up for all the alternative people. He'd have been so cool. And what did they do? They stuck him up on a cross and tortured him to death." "Marigold," Star said sharply. "Look at Dol's card." "Oh yes, darling, it's lovely," Marigold said. She blinked at it. "What's it meant to be?" "Oh, it's stupid. It's all a mess," I said. "It's all the things you like most," said Star. "That's beautiful," said Marigold, looking and looking at it. Then she started crying again. "Marigold!" "I'm sorry. It's just it makes me feel so awful. Look at the pub and the high heels and the sexy tops. These aren't mumsie things. Dol should have drawn . . . I don't know, a kitten and a pretty frock and . . . and Marks & Spencer. That's what mums like." "It's not what you like and you're my mum," I said. "Dol spent ages making you that card," said Star. She was starting to get red in the face. "I know, I know. It's lovely. I said. I'm the hopeless case. Don't you get what I'm saying?" Marigold sniffed again. "Anyway, let's have breakfast. Hey, can I have my cake now? Birthday cake for breakfast! Great idea, eh, girls?" We stared at her. "We didn't get you a cake," said Star. "You know we didn't. We asked and you said a cake was the very last thing you wanted, remember?" "No," said Marigold, looking blank. She'd gone on and on that we mustn't get her a cake because she was sure she was starting to put on weight and the icing would only give her toothache and anyway she didn't even like birthday cake. "I love birthday cake," said Marigold. "I always have a special birthday cake. You know how much it means to me because I never had my own special birthday cake when I was a kid. Or a proper party. I hate it that you girls don't want proper parties and you just go to stupid places like Laser Quest and McDonald's." "They're not stupid," I said. Star got asked to lots of stuff but I'd never been to a McDonald's party and no one had ever asked me to a Laser Quest either. I hoped I'd maybe make lots of friends when I went to the high school. I wasn't in with the party crowd in my class. Not that I wanted to go to any of their parties. I wouldn't have been friends with any of that lot if you'd paid me. Except maybe Tasha. "OK, OK, I'll go and get you a birthday cake," said Star. "Marks and Sparks opens early on a Saturday. You wait." From the Hardcover edition. Excerpted from The Illustrated Mum by Jacqueline Wilson All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.

Reviews provided by Syndetics

Publishers Weekly Review

Wilson (The Suitcase Kid; Bad Girls) again affectingly portrays an adolescent in a remarkably real and wrenching situation. Ten-year-old narrator Dolphin lives with her 13-year-old sister Star and their beautiful, tattoo-covered mother, Marigold, in a Housing Trust flat outside London. Subsisting on welfare, the trio has moved frequently, which has been especially hard on Dolphin (aka "Dol"), who, unlike Star, is plain, wears hand-me-downs and is constantly teased by peers. Marigold, a binge drinker, subjects the girls to dramatic, sometimes frightening mood swings, which render her by turns delusional, agitated and withdrawn. The author deftly balances the pressures placed on Star and Dol, who often wind up caring for their mother and hiding her condition (revealed finally as bipolar disorder) from others, with more universal childhood experiences such as flirting with boys (for Star) and making friends (for Dol). Marigold, still obsessed with her long lost lover Micky, Star's father, successfully searches him out at a concert and brings him home to meet his daughter. When he invites Star to come live with him, Marigold further unravels, culminating in a difficult decision for Dol. The young heroine's candid narrative convincingly and poignantly lays bare her pain and vulnerability as well as her pluck and resilience. And her sense of humor leavens the grim trappings of her situation ("[Micky sent] a little silver dolphin on a silver chain. I wished I didn't always get stuck with dolphins"). Sympathetic and perceptively portrayed supporting players further enrich the novel, including Dol's only friend, Oliver, a wise boy also dealing with a needy mother; the big-hearted foster mother who takes in Dol; and Dol's own newly discovered birth father. Ages 10-up. (Feb.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

School Library Journal Review

Gr 5-8-A searing portrait of a woman's mental illness and its effects on her children is told by her youngest daughter, 10-year-old Dolphin. High school student Star is a practical, angry teen. Their mother, Marigold, is covered in tattoos and compulsively gets new ones whenever she gets upset, which happens more and more frequently. The family is constantly on the brink of being homeless and the girls essentially have to take care of themselves and their mother. Marigold is obsessed with Star's father, whom she hasn't seen in years and who doesn't even know that he has a daughter. She finds Micky at a concert and is convinced that they will now reunite. Star goes to stay with him because she can't handle Marigold any longer, leaving Dolphin with a mother who is less and less stable. After a complete breakdown, she is put in a psychiatric ward and Dol is put in foster care, at least temporarily. Star comes back and stays there as well. Dolphin is a sympathetic character and the relationship between the sisters is realistically portrayed, as is Marigold's mental illness. This isn't a fun read and the girls' future is only moderately hopeful, but it is an involving one on a subject not often portrayed in children's literature.-B. Allison Gray, John Jermain Library, Sag Harbor, NY (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Booklist Review

Gr. 5-7. Wilson, who always writes realistically and with humor, outdoes herself in this story about nine-year-old Dolphin, the narrator; her older sister, Star; and their one-of-a-kind mother, Marigold. Covered with tattoos and alternating between manic and depressive behavior, Marigold nonetheless inspires devotion from her daughters, who do more of the mothering than she does. After Star's father turns up and she goes to live with him, Marigold sinks deeper into madness. Dolphin finally helps get her to the hospital and then enters foster care, with her own father hovering in the background. Wilson's strong suit is her characterization. Star is convincing as the worried, responsible sister who longs to move out but feels guilty about it, and Dolphin never seems older than her years as she relates the alternating awe and fear that almost everyone around her inspires. The centerpiece, though, is Marigold, who tries to be a good mother, even as she gives in to her immature feelings and struggles with her bipolar disease. There are a few unrealistic plot points, but readers will be too busy rooting for Dolphin and her family to notice. --Ilene Cooper Copyright 2005 Booklist

Horn Book Review

Ten-year-old Dolphin and her older half-sister, Star, have always coped with their mother Marigold's mood swings. But when Marigold's mental instability grows severe and Star moves to her father's house, Dolphin finds herself in the frightening role of caretaker. The narrator's young voice rings with surprising maturity in this story of mental illness and family solidarity. (c) Copyright 2010. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted. All rights reserved.

Kirkus Book Review

Wilson admirably keeps things upbeat as she explores two sisters' coping with a mother who is careening further into mental illness and alcoholism. Beautiful, odd, and very tattooed Marigold loves her two daughters, ten-year-old Dolphin and 12-year-old Star--progeny of two different brief relationships--but can barely take care of them responsibly. More often than not, they've had to care for her, and they strive mightily to make allowances and appear normal. When Star's father invites the girls to live with him, only his own daughter accepts, and Dolphin must make things work at home. A particularly bizarre behavior by Mum forces Dolphin, buoyed by a newfound, supportive friendship with a classmate who's also an outsider, to take drastic action. The very satisfying ending--Dolphin connects with the father she's never seen and maybe, after hospitalization, Mum will get better--is pat, but readers won't care. They'll feel for these two very realistically drawn girls and hope for the best along with them. The author doesn't shy away from the difficulties, but there's humor here, too. (Fiction. 11-14) Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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