by Camille Deangelis (Author)
Discover the middle-grade debut Kirkus Reviews calls "spellbinding" by an award-winning author Booklist says "has crafted a definite winner."
Josie and Alec both live at 444 Sparrow Street. They sleep in the same room, but they've never laid eyes on each other. They are twelve years old and a hundred years apart. The children meet through a hand-painted talking board―Josie in 1915, Alec in 2015―and form a friendship across the century that separates them.
But a chain of events leave Josie and her little sister Cass trapped in the house and afraid for their safety, and Alec must find out what's going to happen to them. Can he help them change their future when it's already past?
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Gr 4-7-Twelve-year-olds Josie and Alec live a century apart-until supernatural means bring them together. In 1915, Josie's famed mother, Lavinia Clifford, makes her living speaking to the dead. But Josie and her little sister, Cass, are scarcely allowed to speak to anyone. Following his parents' divorce, Alec and his mother spend 2015 building a new life in the old house at 444 Sparrow Street. Enter a Ouija "talking" board, an all-knowing doll named Mrs. Gubbins, a library archive, a time capsule, and some phonograph cylinders. DeAngelis cements a compelling friendship through time. Through Alec's conversations with Josie, one thing becomes clear: cold and cruel Lavinia has nothing in common with his own loving mother. More concerned with writing her memoir than caring for her daughters, Lavinia soon manipulates even Josie's newfound friendship to her own advantage. Chapters alternate between the 20th and 21st centuries, incorporating differences in technology and contemporary everyday life. Child welfare is a prominent theme, as Cass's childhood precocity is punished with physical abuse and neglect. The narrative is excellent. The book is marred only by "A Word of Advice" with a rather foreboding caution against using "talking" boards in real life. VERDICT An immersive read oozing with cross-genre appeal for realistic, historical, mystery, and scary fiction readers.
Copyright 2018 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
"You will fall in love with DeAngelis' characters and root for their impossible friendship across time. Perfect for fans of historical fiction, this spine-tingling paranormal novel is impossible to put down." —Marika McCoola, author of the award-winning and New York Times-bestselling Baba Yaga's Assistant
—Marika McCoolaCamille DeAngelis is the author of several novels for adults--each of them as full of impossible things as The Boy From Tomorrow--as well as a travel guide to Ireland and a book of nonfiction called Life Without Envy: Ego Management for Creative People. Her young adult novel Bones & All won an Alex Award from the American Library Association in 2016. Camille loves knitting, sewing, yoga, and baking vegan cupcakes. She lives in New England.