Degrees of difficulty /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Justicz, Julie E., author.
Imprint:Burlington, Vermont : Fomite, [2019]
©2019
Description:283 pages ; 23 cm
Language:English
Subject:
Format: Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/12027310
Hidden Bibliographic Details
ISBN:9781944388744
1944388745
Summary:"Love is the foundation of family, but at what cost? After Ben Novotny is born with a rare chromosomal disorder that produces profound mental disability and brain-racking seizures, his parents, Caroline and Perry, and their two other children are asked to give more than they have. When Ben is an infant, the care and the fear are constant. The demands and pressure only mount when he and his older brother and sister become teenagers. Ben needs even more from his family, just as Hugo, the athlete and the 'good soul', and Ivy, the ambitious rebel, must carve out their own identities. Over the span of decades, this deep and understanding novel follow each family member, Perry and Caroline, Hugo and Ivy, as their lives diverge. In Degrees of Difficulty, grace is found amidst heartache, love finds a way after loss."--Provided by publisher.
Review by Booklist Review

It is difficult not to be drawn into the lives of the Novotnys, an Atlanta family navigating a sea of emotions as they struggle to care for youngest child Ben, who is severely disabled. The book opens with Perry, the family's patriarch, en route to retrieve Ben from yet another group home, the latest in the family's attempts to seek the type of care that they are no longer able to provide for him. Told in alternating chapters by Perry, Ben's mom, Caroline, and Ben's older siblings, Justicz's debut doesn't shy away from exploring the uncomfortable emotions the Novotnys experience on a daily basis resentment, shame, fear each family member in his or her own way. Some flee, while others deal with issues head-on. But will a tragic event bring the family closer or pull them further apart? In this interesting examination of family dynamics, Justicz writes with a deep empathy that still allows for moments of levity. She relates scenes with visual clarity, and her characters, especially Ben, the center of the Novotnys' universe, are vividly drawn.--Danielle Bauter Copyright 2010 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Caring for a profoundly disabled child 24/7 is both exhausting and tension-producing for every member of a family. Worse, the lack of affordable and readily available social supports all too often puts the burden of care on the child's siblings and parents.For dad Perry Novotny, a successful Atlanta homebuilder, his wife, Caroline Clissold, a Shakespeare scholar and Emory professor, and their two older kids, Ivy and Hugo, the challenge of rearing their youngest, Ben, a nonverbal boy with an IQ of 32, has left almost everyone frayed and close to despair. But not Hugo. As the oldest son, he seems to enjoy engaging with his kid brother. In fact, Hugo stays by Ben's side whenever possible, soothing him during and after his near-constant grand mal seizures, interpreting the varying meanings of his sole word, "Guh," and generally keeping him entertained. After Ben is booted from his umpteenth group homeBen bites, scratches, and hits, unaware of his capacity to cause serious physical injury to othersteenage Hugo makes Ben his project. Others in the family know that this is not a good plan, but, somehow, they allow it to unfold. For their part, Ivy withdraws into schoolwork while Caroline withdraws into scholarly research and soothes her nerves with drugs and alcohol. Perry, meanwhile, tries to keep a smile on his face no matter what. The tensions are palpable, and an inevitable crisis looms over much of the novel. When it occurs, it packs a punch and provides an incandescent spotlight on how few resources exist for families like the Novotny-Clissolds. The novel is heartbreaking and enraging, even chilling, as it exposes, in straightforward and never-maudlin terms, the stresses and strains of providing constant care to someone who will never be independent. Different coping styles are also beautifully explicated, without judgment.A stunning, heartfelt, and poignant debut. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Review by Booklist Review


Review by Kirkus Book Review