Why a Booktrail?
2000s: A journey into a new culture and a new awareness as one boy moves with his family from Ottawa to Laos..
2000s: A journey into a new culture and a new awareness as one boy moves with his family from Ottawa to Laos..
Eighteen-year-old Cam Scott has a lot to deal with at the moment. His dad is not around and his mum has just accepted a job posting in Vientiane, Laos which means a move halfway across the world. What about his dreams of playing basketball for Ottawa not to mention the strange new culture and life he’s about to have forced on him.
His new life however has some strange effects on him as he begins to make friends and even finds love. There’s a way of building good faith here – you buy a caged bird – a ‘merit bird’ and that gives you good karma. But when tragedy strikes, Cam finds himself needing a lot of good faith from a culture and people he realises he knows little about.
The journey to Laos was ‘first happy Millennium, then welcome to the dark ages’. Everything seems in slow motion, everyone is sleepy or relaxed and from the moment they get into a tuk tuk, Cam’s impression is clear
The Laos culture, seen through Cam’s eyes is a brutally honest, yet still colourful snapshot of life here. This is no paradise, the palm trees are skinny and the ponds stagnant. A young woman kills a chicken at the side of the road – the palette of beauty and death mixing in to a glorious ruby red on the street.
From first impressions to some that linger –
The Merit Birds are a way to build up merit and karma in one’s life and so when Cam is sent to Laos prison, the messages of Karma, the Buddhist faith and the cultural differences in the country are all explored. How free was he really in Canada? How trapped is he now in Laos? As free as a bird?
Then I came to the last trembling bird. “Go!” I urged him. “Get out of here”. But the bird stayed – so used to the cage and so fearful of the unknown.
The sights, sounds, smells, faces and everywhere from the market stalls to the flashy clubs to the brown paddy fields and of course the inside of a Laos prison all stunningly evoked so the reader gets to experience it as Cam does. In vivid coulour. And those merit birds continue to flap their wings in your mind.
Susan:
Not having read much YA before – I know shame on me! I wanted to read this as it sounded very impressive from the outset. The locations were a particular attraction but as soon as I started to read, it was clear how this was going to be a mix of stories -an angry young teenager taken out of his comfort zone, a cultural shock to contend with and one heck of a misadventure. There’s a romance and a search for the truth and that combination made for some interesting reading.
I felt completely transported to Vientiane and through Cam’s eyes, I felt a confused teenager in a new land with every noise, smell, sight – even the weather was so very different to those in Canada.
It’s a coming of age story and there were times I could have slapped some sense in to Cam to be honest, but then that’s just me. The whole story is more important than any quibbles I had about him. Might be different if I were a teenager.
A really good blend of cultures, landscapes, teenage emotions and life lessons to be learned. oh and the idea of Merit Birds was a particular highlight for me. What they are and what they stand for – something to take away from this book no matter where in the world you’re from.