Phoenix Rising (novel) explained

Phoenix Rising is a 1994 book by Karen Hesse. It is a realistic fiction book about thirteen-year old Nyle Sumner, who learns about love and death after victims of a nuclear accident come to stay at her grandmother's Vermont farmhouse.[1]

Plot

Thirteen-year old Nyle Sumner and her grandmother's lives are disrupted by a nuclear accident in Vermont. Everyone that lives anywhere near the accident suddenly has to wear masks, test everywhere for high levels of radiation, and watch everything they eat and drink to make sure it's not contaminated until the government gives the all clear. Nyle and her grandmother live together on a sheep farm, near the nuclear plant in fictional Cookshire. She and her grandmother take in two evacuees from the accident: fifteen-year old Ezra Trent and his mother, Miriam.

Ezra and his parents were all sickened by radiation, with Mr. Trent passing away five days before Ezra and Mrs. Trent were taken in by Gran and Nyle. Nyle is terrified to let herself care about Ezra because she believes that if she lets herself care for him, she will end up losing him, just like her mother, father, and grandfather. Ezra and Mrs. Trent stay in the back bedroom of the farmhouse, which Nyle calls "the dying room" because it was where her mother and grandfather had died when they were sick. She initially pushes Ezra away, but they eventually grow closer over the course of his recovery at the farm.

Characters

References

[2]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Hesse . Karen . Phoenix Rising . 1994 . Henry Holt and Company, LLC . New York. 978-0-8050-3108-9 . First.
  2. Book: Hesse . Karen . Phoenix Rising . 1994 . Henry Holt and Company, LLC . New York. 978-0-8050-3108-9 . First.