by Sashi Kaufman (Author)
In this affecting middle grade debut, perfect for fans of Erin Entrada Kelly and Lynda Mullaly Hunt, a boy finds unexpected friendship in a motley group of kids following a devastating loss.
Nothing's been the same since Lucas's older brother died. After the accident, Lucas's mom disappeared without any warning, and his dad is struggling to cope. Lucas is pretty much alone--except for the other kids he meets at his middle school's aftercare program.
There's Cat, the star athlete; Robbie, the goofball; Anna, the popular girl; and Finn, the mysterious new kid. Between games of Sardines, a reverse hide-and-seek, the kids realize that each group member has a secret wish. If they work together, the group might be able to help make each person's dream come true. But for that to happen, Lucas will have to find the strength to trust his new friends with his family's secrets.
"You will fall in love with these characters and root for them each step of the way." - Ann Braden, author of The Benefits of Being an Octopus
"At once tender and funny, honest and smart." - Megan Frazer Blakemore, award-winning author of The Water Castle
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Lucas is grieving the death of his "all-star kid" older brother when he starts middle school, and he misses his mother, who left home with no explanation three weeks back. To make things worse, his distraught father insists that Lucas go to afterschool care instead of coming home to Oak Hill Trailer Park in the afternoons. But Teen Club, as it is called, turns out to be the best part of Lucas's days after he bonds with his fellow attendees: Cat, a basketball player who yearns to cut her hair; amiable Robbie, who experiences bullying; Anna, one of the few brown-skinned students in their small Maine town, who longs for her mother's attention; and formally spoken new kid Finn. During the program's rec time, the group has adventures outside, playing games of Sardines, building a tree fort, and collecting acorn caps in jars—when each kid fills their jar, the group collaborates on granting their wish. Tracing a growing adolescent bond through an extended metaphor about finding community, Kaufman (The Other Way Around) writes fresh and relatable characters and a smoothly concocted plot that provides clever, collaborative answers to seemingly unsolvable conflicts. Ages 8-12. Agent: Lauren MacLeod, Strothman Agency. (Oct.)
Copyright 2022 Publishers Weekly, LLC Used with permissionFull of honesty, humor, and hope. You will fall in love with these characters and root for them each step of the way. — Ann Braden, author of The Benefits of Being an Octopus
At once tender and funny, honest and smart. The characters will squeeze into your heart. — Megan Frazer Blakemore, award-winning author of The Water Castle