Get out your party clothes! Today those in the know celebrate National Paper Clip Day. The modern version of this lowly but extremely useful object was patented on November 9, 1899 by William D. Middlebrook of Waterbury, Connecticut. But during World War II the paper clip became the symbol of national unity in Norway. Forbidden by the occupying Nazis from wearing buttons imprinted with their king’s initials, Norwegians wore paper clips on their lapels as a show of opposition. Citizens wearing this object could, and did, get arrested.
Paper clips keep all kinds of valuable papers connected, and one of the heroes of the book of the day, Neal Shusterman’s The Schwa Was Here, collects them. He owns the paper clip that held together the Nuclear Arms Treaty signed by Reagan and Gorbachev. Just as paper clips usually go unnoticed, so does Calvin Schwa. He is the kid that everyone fails to see, the one that blends in, that no one notices and that no one pays attention to.
Eighth-grade Anthony (Antsy) Bonono can’t remember when he first met the Schwa. As he says: “You couldn’t even think about him without losing track of your own thoughts—like even in your head he was somehow becoming invisible.” But the Schwa can go places and do things, without anyone noticing, like the faculty lounge at school, for instance. So Antsy becomes the Schwa’s agent, placing bets and collecting the money for the two of them as Calvin pulls off one stunt after another.
All goes well until Antsy stretches too far. He wagers that the Schwa can enter the apartment of the rich local misanthrope, Old Man Crowly, a Howard Hughes type character, and get away with it. And when Calvin fails, suddenly both Antsy and the Schwa find themselves up against someone who can outthink and outwit them. Old Man Crowly insists they walk his fourteen Afghans every day as well as take care of his blind granddaughter. Then things really get tough for the boys.
This true-to-life story has been executed with great humor and insight into kids. All the characters are wonderfully eccentric but seem as real as any that can be found in children’s books. Yet the book takes a very serious look at the way some children slip between the cracks, going unnoticed by adults or their peers. Winner of the Boston Globe–Horn Book Award for Fiction, The Schwa Was Here appeals to those eleven- to fourteen-year-olds who love a funny, realistic story with appealing characters that makes them think as well.
Today I’m going to notice all the ways I use the paper clip—and really look at the people I see during the day. The Schwa Was Here reminds me to pay attention to everyone and everything.
Here’s a passage from The Schwa Was Here:
“And I’ve heard things about him, too,” Ira said. “Crazy stuff.”
“Such as?”
Ira came in close enough so I could smell last night’s garlic-whatever on his breath. “His eyes,” Ira whispered. “They say his eyes change color to match the sky. They say his shoes are always the same color as the ground. They say if you stare at him long enough, you can read what’s written on the wall behind him.”
Also recommended:
- Antsy Does Time by Neal Shusterman
Additional Information
A few other events for
- Happy birthday Brock Cole (The Goats) and Stephen T. Johnson (Alphabet City).
- It’s the birth date of Mary Louisa Molesworth (1839-1921), Tell Me a Story; T. H. White (1906-1964), The Sword in the Stone, The Once and Future King; and Eleanor Coerr (1922-2010), Sadako and the Thousand Paper Cranes.
- President John F. Kennedy (1917-1963) was born on this day. Read Jack’s Path of Courage by Doreen Rappaport, illustrated by Matt Tavares, and When JFK Was My Father by Amy Gordon.
- Happy statehood birthday to Rhode Island (1790) and Wisconsin (1848).