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Likely Stories - Sipsworth

Hi, and welcome back to Likely Stories. I'm Paige Connell, an English teacher at Midway High School, with a review of the most precious book about finding your purpose, caring for others, and the beauty of life-even among the smallest of creatures. Sipsworth by Simon van Booy moved me to tears and filled my cup.

Helen Cartwright is an elderly British woman living in Australia.When she understands she has come to the end of her life, she moves back to her former home on Westminster Crescent in England to live out her few remaining days alone. Her husband and son are dead, and she knows that if she waits just a little longer, she can join them.

Helen is lonely, aimless, and isolated from any of the former creature comforts she once enjoyed. A chance encounter with her neighbor's rubbish bin brings her an unexpected guest--a tiny mouse she names Sipsworth, for the meager amount of liquid he consumes.

Helen and Sipsworth quickly develop quite a bond as she figures out how to make him comfortable, feed him correctly, and tend to his very needs. She builds him a home after going to the library to look up books about mice. She learns proper mouse nutrition by ringing the local veterinarian and having her on speed dial. She speaks to the neighbor whose trash heap brought her this new friend.

All these things bring her into contact with lovely people in her neighborhood, and suddenly, layer by layer, Helen's world begins to broaden once more. We realize this before Helen does, and it is a credit to the delicate way the author introduces each interaction with grace and tenderness and dignity for Helen.

Sipsworth gives Helen a renewed sense of purpose in life because his care and upkeep requires a fairly rigorous schedule.

Much of the dialogue is between Helen and what she imagines Sipsworth's responses to be. So when her tiny friend faces a medical emergency, it is to which both comical and endearing the lengths Helen goes in order to provide him with the best care possible. And just when you thought you knew everything about Helen, which there is more to her story that is revealed that broadens and deepens your appreciation of her character. This story is told sequentially, through each day of the week, as human and mouse interact and depend on each other for their very lives--his physical, hers social/emotional. Van Booy takes a seemingly common concept of grief and end-of-life endeavors and injects powerful lessons about the importance of having a purpose, the necessity for compassion, the value of dignity, the reasons for seeing others and being seen. And he does it mostly by placing the focus on a character who never utters a single word.

If you liked A Man Called Ove for the way it depicts the importance of connection for the elderly or The Tale of Despereaux, a really beautiful children's book about a mouse who singlehandedly saves the kingdom, you will want to drink this story in. Just make sure you take a glassful and not only a sips worth.

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Paige Connell has been a Wacoan since 2002 when she attended Baylor University, fell in love with the city, and never left. She works at Midway High School and has been teaching English since 2009. Paige’s passion is reading: she regularly reads 120 books or more each year and loves to share her thoughts on Goodreads and social media. Additionally, Paige co-authored the children’s book Goodnight Waco on behalf of the Junior League of Waco in 2021. When she’s not reading or listening to a book, you can find her nursing a mug of tea, analyzing Taylor Swift lyrics for figurative language elements, or spending time with her family—her husband Chance, her daughter Cara, and her Corgi mutt Remy.