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40 pages 1 hour read

Jordan Sonnenblick

Falling Over Sideways

Fiction | Novel | Middle Grade | Published in 2016

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Symbols & Motifs

Falling/Catching

The motifs of falling and catching appear throughout the narrative, starting with its title: Everything changes for Claire “when my father—and my life—tilted and slumped over sideways” (2).

 

Sometimes the falling is quite negative and jarring. Claire’s father literally slumps over when he has a stroke. Claire and Matthew stumble in their daily activities as they readjust their lives after this traumatic event. Claire often wants to “catch a break” from the realities of life, even though she initially doesn’t put in as much effort as Matthew or her mom.

 

But the motif can also be cast a positive—as when a protector figure catches the falling person. Claire remembers a game she used to play with her father where he’d say, “No, I catching you!” (48). With her father suffering from his stroke, Claire wishes to be there to catch her father while also lamenting that he can no longer “catch” her. By the end of the novel, Sonnenblick underscores that part of growing up is becoming a protector of those who were there to catch you when you were small.

Dance School

Claire’s dance school is a welcome respite for her. It’s a place where she can be herself and where her middle-school life doesn’t infringe. When her father has a stroke, the dance school is the last refuge that Claire has where she can feel a sense of normality—something she maintains by keeping her father’s condition a secret. The disruption for Claire, however, is within. In this sense, the dance school is peaceful only in an illusory way—a symbol of Claire being in denial that her world has forever been changed.

Nicknames

Nicknames work as symbols and motifs in Falling Over Sideways to bring home the effects of positive and negative memories. At school, bullies use nicknames to deride Claire: Ryder jeeringly calls her Storky because of her long legs, while Regina meanly calls her Starbuck because she’s white. On the other hand, nicknames help Claire’s father reconnect to the world when he survives his stroke and returns home for rehabilitation. Claire’s nickname is Piggy, and remembering this helps him reconnect with her. His nickname for his wife is Bug, a romantic pet name that references Herby Love Bug. Claire’s father remembers his mother, Gram, with the nickname Hat, which is the first word he spoke as a baby. But even these positive associations have a darker side: Matthew worries that because his father loves him less because he doesn’t have a nickname for him. 

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