by John David Anderson (Author)
A heartfelt and unexpected novel about an inseparable brother and sister, from the beloved author of Posted.
From the first moment Morgan can remember, Claire has always been there. Big sister and little brother. Cat and Mouse. They've always understood each other, saved each other, seen each other. And they stuck to their own personal code, unwritten but understood, that siblings were inseparable, that they had each other's backs, no matter what.
At least, they used to.
Somewhere along the line, things between them shifted. Claire started fighting more with Mom, storming out of the house, spending more and more time away, and Morgan felt his sister and best friend slipping away. Now he spends nearly every night sitting awake in his room, waiting for the sound of her key in the lock.It's a sound he hasn't heard in nearly a week, ever since her and Mom's worst fight ever.
So when Claire finally calls and tells Morgan she wants to spend the day together, just the two of them, he knows this might be his only chance--not just to convince her to come home but to remind her how good things used to be, and could be again. But Claire has her own plan for the day. One that will mean that, no matter what happens, things between them are going to change forever.
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An intensely felt tale of adolescents desperate for both stability and change.
Anderson knows to let a big, complicated family story be complicated, to afford it the space it needs, and to allow a young boy to earn wisdom throughout the course of a powerful narrative.
Artistic 12-year-old Morgan has always been close with his 18-year-old sister Claire, a former champion runner. But lately, increasingly rebellious Claire's contentious relationship with their mother has strained that bond, especially since Morgan's the one left to pick up the pieces anytime Claire storms out. Still, Morgan dreams of somehow healing the rift in his family. After Claire and Mom's most recent argument, Claire returns home after several days to "borrow" Morgan for one of their traditional sibling adventures. Morgan sees it as the perfect opportunity to talk her into apologizing and coming home for good. They instead spend the day visiting Claire's favorite spots around the city and creating new memories, as when she teaches him how to drive. As Morgan learns why Claire chafes at their mother's expectations and pressure, he comes to understand the challenges that await him in the future and realizes that his family's problems may be too big to solve in a single day. This emotionally tumultuous tale of familial strife and sibling bonds by Anderson (Homebound) is a quietly intimate yet powerful examination of the need for change, growth, and maturation. Morgan and his family read as white. Ages 8-12. (May)
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