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Searching... Salem Main Library | J MacLachlan, P. | Searching... Unknown |
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Summary
Summary
A Publishers Weekly Best Book of 2019!
A young girl finds herself--and so much more--during a summer stay with her grandparents in this tender novel from Newbery Award-winning author Patricia MacLachlan.
When Louisa (short for Louisiana) is sent to stay with her grandparents for the summer, she's not looking forward to it. While her brother is determined to find a way to stay on Deer Island forever, Louisa would rather be off having adventures with their globetrotting ornithographer parents. She's a writer, and there's nothing on all of Deer Island to write about--right?
Louisa quickly discovers that small doesn't necessarily mean quiet , and the island has plenty of scope for the imagination. It also has George, the boy who helps her see the world in a whole new light.
The end of summer is coming fast, and Louisa must decide what she really wants: travel the world with her parents, or stay on Deer Island with the people she's only just learning to love?
Author Notes
Patricia MacLachlan (1938-2022) was the author of many well-loved novels and picture books, including Sarah, Plain and Tall , winner of the Newbery Medal; its sequels, Skylark and Caleb's Story ; Edward's Eyes ; The True Gift ; Waiting for the Magic ; White Fur Flying ; Fly Away ; and Snow Horses . She lived in western Massachusetts.
Reviews (4)
Publisher's Weekly Review
Newbery Medalist MacLachlan again concisely and authentically conveys character and emotion in this novel about two siblings spending the summer on their grandparents' Deer Island farm. When redheaded Louisa, almost 12 and a "secret writer," resolutely tells her grandmother, Boots, "I hate change," the wise woman replies that change can help "you find out who you are." And change does, in fact, expand Louisa's sense of self and connection with others. Her innate bond with her grandfather Jake strengthens as he loses his eyesight, and when Jake introduces her to brown-skinned George, a young friend and neighbor whom he's teaching to drive, Louisa recognizes the perceptive and eloquent boy as a kindred spirit who "makes change sound more interesting to me." MacLachlan tenderly captures their instantaneous friendship, burgeoning attraction, and uncanny ability to communicate nonverbally-a skill endearingly shared by Boots and Jake. Louisa's younger brother Theo, a sensitive bookworm who longs to live on the island full-time, instigates another pivotal change that rewardingly caps this resonant story of community, love new and old, and embracing the unknown. Ages 8-12. Agent: Rubin Pfeffer, Rubin Pfeffer Content. (May) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Horn Book Review
Louisa and Theo spend the summer with their grandparents on an island off the coast of Maine, where they become part of the island community and find a way to remain year-round. MacLachlan's short novel is peopled with rich characters and infused with a strong sense of place. This is a quiet, introspective story about the many ways humans show love. (c) Copyright 2019. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Kirkus Review
A kiss on the palm is at once simple and full of emotion, meaning, magic, andwonder.MacLachlan's latest, too, offers much promise and wonder while also conjuring memories and dreams. Eleven-year-old (almost 12) Louisiana, nicknamed "Louisa," and her brother, Theo, travel to the tiny island where their paternal grandparents, Boots and Jake, live, same as every summer. Louisa does not like change, and her erudite younger brother craves the stability of Boots and Jake's quiet island refuge. Both children live with the gnawing uncertainty of life with bird-watching parents struck by wanderlust. This summer, however, is different. Jake is losing his eyesight. And Louisa meets George. Through these two changes, MacLachlan delivers a sweet, evocative tale of love young and old, the entrenched and enduring paired with the new and tenuous. Her prose is stunningly extravagant in its sparseness, painting a watercolor canvas of emotion with the barest of strokes. Each simple word glides easily to the next, making this a prose poem of discovery told as a story of interconnected lives and feelings. "Why," Louisa asks herself," when I look in the mirror now, do I suddenly look beautiful for the very first time in my life?" Louisa and her family are white, and George, the son of a Tanzanian immigrant and an American aid worker, is black.This book clings to the heart and echoes in the soul for days. (Fiction. 8-12) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Review
Twelve-year-old Louisa and her younger brother, Theo, spend every summer on Deer Island with their grandparents Jake and Boots while their parents do bird research. On the cusp of her teens, Louisa fears change yet knows it is inevitable. This summer, Jake contemplates blindness and giving up his beloved 1938 Cord car, and Boots becomes secretive. Theo dreams of living permanently with his grandparents, while Louisa explores her budding friendship with George. A project involving interviews and artwork highlighting some of the island's notable citizens brings many of the novel's subplots together and leads to a satisfying conclusion. Newbery author MacLachlan's writing is both lyrical and succinct, providing readers with everything they need yet leaving much room for contemplation. Her depictions of love are particularly idealized: Jake and Boots, who met as children, still dance; George's mixed-race parents share frequent PDA; and Louisa's career-driven parents (whom Boots describes as dense but disturbingly intelligent) keep their emotions to themselves. Louisa and George's blossoming relationship is both heartwarming and rare, perfect in its dreamy innocence.--Kay Weisman Copyright 2019 Booklist