• The Umbrella House

The Umbrella House

Publication Date
June 06, 2023
Genre / Grade Band
Fiction /  4th − 5th
The Umbrella House

Description

In this intimate and inspiring novel about the power of art and the value of community, award-winning author and former New Yorker Colleen Nelson brings life and liveliness to an eccentric cast of New York City neighbors.

Middle-schooler and Manhattanite Roxy Markowski wants to tell the truth fearlessly and powerfully, just like her idols at Veracity News. She and her best friend Scout already make YouTube videos together about East Village life, so when Veracity News announces a Young Voices video competition, Roxy knows it's the perfect opportunity to make a name for herself, if only she can find a story worth telling. When a real-estate mogul threatens to buy her historic East Village apartment building, Umbrella House, Roxy sets out to create a video about the people who live in her building, depicting their love for art, community, and family.

With time and her options for saving Umbrella House running out, Roxy finds herself caught up in the mystery of the Midnight Muralist, a famous East Village artist whose murals once made buildings famous and valuable. Could finding this enigmatic artist be the key to saving her historic East Village apartment building?

Publication date
June 06, 2023
Classification
Fiction
Page Count
-
ISBN-13
9781772782790
Lexile Measure
710
Guided Reading Level
-
Publisher
Pajama Press
Series
-
BISAC categories
JUV039060 - Juvenile Fiction | Social Themes | Friendship
JUV013030 - Juvenile Fiction | Family | Multigenerational
JUV003000 - Juvenile Fiction | Art & Architecture
JUV023000 - Juvenile Fiction | Lifestyles | City & Town Life
JUV039290 - Juvenile Fiction | Social Themes | Activism & Social Justice
Library of Congress categories
Detective and mystery fiction
Apartment houses
Journalists
Secrecy
Middle school students
Novels
Mural painting and decoration
Gentrification
Children's stories, Canadian
East Village (New York, N.Y.)

ALA/Booklist

A well-paced story with a satisfying conclusion.

Kirkus

An uplifting account of creative kids working to preserve a city landmark. 

Publishers Weekly

Twelve-year-old best friends Ruby Markowski and Scout Chang-Poulin host a YouTube channel called EaVill Kids, where they share stories about goings-on around the East Village. Seeking a local-interest story that will get them noticed by Veracity News, a website running a young voices journalism contest, they start reporting on neighborhood gentrification, namely the shuttering of small businesses. When a development company curries favor with city councilmembers to exploit a legal loophole, Umbrella House--the tweens' co-op building--becomes vulnerable to purchase. Ruby and Scout soon join forces with other Umbrella House residents and East Village locals to save their home. Taking inspiration from the real-life Umbrella House in Manhattan, which was claimed by unhoused individuals in 1988 and designated as a co-op in 2010, this story blends present-day drama and nostalgia for grittier times. Nelson (The Undercover Book List), who, according to an end note, lived in the venerable building in the early 2000s, sketches the events in approachable, page-turning prose. With its gumshoe kids and a grassroots heart reminiscent of Seedfolks, Nelson's novel both commends activists' can-do spirit and emphasizes the heights to which one can go when backed by unwavering communal support. Ages 8-12. (June)

Copyright 2023 Publishers Weekly, LLC Used with permission.
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