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The eponymous heroine of Gwyn Rubio's Icy Sparks is
only 10 years old the first time it happens. The sudden itching, the pressure
squeezing her skull, and the "little invisible rubber bands" attached to her
eyelids are all symptoms of Tourette's syndrome. At this point, of course, Icy
doesn't yet have a name for these unsettling impulses. But whenever they become
too much to resist, she runs down to her grandparents' root cellar, and there
she gives in, croaking, jerking, cursing, and popping her eyes. Nicknamed the
"frog child" by her classmates, Icy soon becomes "a little girl who had to keep
all of her compulsions inside." Only a brief confinement at the Bluegrass State
Hospital persuades her that there are actually children more "different" than
she.
As a first novel about growing up poor, orphaned, and prone to fits in a
small Appalachian town, Icy Sparks tells a fascinating story. By the time
the epilogue rolls around, Icy has prevailed over her disorder and become a
therapist: "Children silent as stone sing for me. Children who cannot speak
create music for me." For readers familiar with this particular brand of
coming-of-age novel--affliction fiction?--Icy's triumph should come as no great
surprise. That's one problem. Another is Rubio's tendency to lapse into
overheated prose: this is a novel in which the characters would sooner yell,
pout, whine, moan, or sass a sentence than simply say it. But the real drawback
to Icy Sparks is that some of the characters--especially the bad
ones--are drawn with very broad strokes indeed, and the moral principles tend to
be equally elementary: embrace your difference, none of us is alone, and so on.
When Icy gets saved at a tent revival, even Jesus takes on the accents of a
self-help guru: "You must love yourself!" With insights like these, this is one
Southern novel that's more Wally Lamb than Harper Lee. --Mary Park
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