Perma-Bound Edition ©2014 | -- |
Publisher's Hardcover ©2014 | -- |
Orphaned twelve-year-old Devin is invited to live at the paradisaical Home for Childhood, but something terrifying is happening to the children there. Devin's synesthesia, which makes him interesting to the Home's sinister Administrator, may provide the key to their escape. Set in a world of postclimate change desperation, Unsworth's story thoughtfully explores the theme of adults' nostalgia for childhood.
School Library Journal Starred ReviewGr 5-8 Twelve-year-old Devin's loss of his grandfather leaves him unprepared to take care of their formerly self-sufficient farm—one of the precious few left on the face of the earth. He leaves this oasis hoping to find some willing hands to help him keep the farm going. Instead, the people he meets in the city are so devoid of morals or compassion that when Devin and his new friend, Kit, have a chance to go to the Gabriel H. Penn Home for Childhood, they seize the opportunity. It isn't long before Devin senses that this home is a little too good to be true. Though surrounded by amusements, beautiful grounds, and plenty of food, the other children are morose, nervous, and listless. Occasionally Devin runs across a child acting in a bizarre, disoriented fashion, yet he is advised by the other children to completely ignore these episodes and never mention them again. The Administrator of this institution interviews Devin and informs him that he is gifted in ways he never understood. His five senses overlap—for instance, visually perceived objects have accompanying sounds only Devin can hear. The Administrator closes the interview with the sinister words, "I'm saving you for something special". This book is reminiscent of Clive Barker's The Thief of Always (HarperCollins, 1992). The suspense and dread build as the mystery gradually unfolds, but it stops short of becoming truly horrific. The conclusion is fast-paced and gripping. An original dystopian story for middle-grade readers.— Kathy Cherniavsky, Ridgefield Library, CT
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)In her first book for children, Unsworth takes readers inside the sinister and secretive world of the Gabriel H. Penn Home for Childhood-a refuge for specially chosen orphans in a bleak, scorching, and none-too-distant future. Devin has spent his young life on a secluded farm, -a pocket of richness- in an otherwise dry wasteland, with his grandfather. After his grandfather dies, Devin leaves for the city in order to survive. There he meets Kit-a girl with a dark past and quick, thieving hands-and Roman, who lures them both to the Home. With a photographic mind and heightened senses, Devin immediately suspects foul play at the Home, despite its extravagance and the too-good-to-be-true amenities it has to offer. Unsworth unravels the story with skilled deliberation, creating a page-turning mix of suspense, intrigue, and anxiety. The kids are genuine and quirky, just the right kind of mismatched misfits to snag readers- hearts. This is a wholly enjoyable journey, and a dystopian vision with some great new twists. Ages 10-up. Agent: Rebecca Carter, Janklow & Nesbit. (Apr.)
Voice of Youth AdvocatesDevin lives with his grandfather on a hidden, verdant farm in a world turned near-desert by the havoc of climate change. The rich live in the city, insulated from the poor, hoarding all the resources. His grandfather's sudden death leaves Devin unable to run the farm on his own, so he heads to the city for help. What he finds instead is violence, deprivation, and feral street children. He also meets Kit, who helps him survive despite his generous impulses. Devin is recruited by the mysterious Roman to the Gabriel H. Penn Home for Childhood, a near-legendary place where children are fed, clothed, and housed in luxury. The opulent but unsavory atmosphere cannot hide that the children are actually prisoners, however, and their fates are precarious: elderly rich "visitors" pay exorbitant fees to temporarily change minds with healthy children, despite the eventual brain damage suffered by the youngsters in the process. The discovery of this deception propels Devin and his pals to actionthey escape, burning the place to the ground in the process, and decide to return to the farm to live communally.The world building is sketchy, and the lack of specificity undermines the energy of prose that more tells than shows. While the home's dark deeds add some suspense, the pace is stolid and the outcome predictable. Characterizations are types with quirks, and backstory is added expeditiously to explain motivation. Despite a somewhat distancing third-person narrative, the language is accessible, and younger fantasy readers may be willing to follow Devin from bucolic farm to wicked city and back again. This is Unsworth's first book for younger readers.Janice M. Del Negro.
ALA BooklistThe story of Hansel and Gretel gets a dystopian sci-fi revamp in Unsworth's ominous offering. Devin has just buried his grandfather, which forces him to leave the fertile valley of his farm and venture out into the drought-plagued, food-scarce world. After befriending fellow street urchin Kit, the two are discovered by a young man who invites them to a place where food, water, and diversions are in abundance. Indeed, the Gabriel H. Penn Home for Childhood seems to be just that, crawling with well-fed kids hoping to be adopted by the elderly visitors. But then Devin and Kit learn of the Place, where every few weeks, they receive a shot and disappear into a dream for two days. Something is rotten, and they need to figure it out before their brains become spoiled. Mostly this book acts as a protracted wait for the big reveal, without much in the way of detail or characters. But the wait is delicious, and the reveal is plenty icky, making this a page-turner perfect for fans of Mike A. Lancaster.
Kirkus Reviews (Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)A group of orphans uncovers a sinister plot in this chilling and engrossing tale filled with detailed, sharply drawn characters. Sometime in a future rife with climate crisis and brutal polarization of wealth, Devin buries his beloved grandfather and sets out to find someone to help him maintain the farm on which he's grown up. In the city, he struggles to find enough food to live on until he meets a clever, street-wise girl named Kit. When Devin is invited by another boy to the Gabriel H. Penn Home for Childhood and insists that Kit be included too, the pair is initially delighted at the abundance of food and other comforts, but they rapidly begin to see that something terrible underpins the home. There are many familiar tropes here, the dystopian setting and the uncanny perfection of the orphanage among them. Yet Unsworth's use of unadorned but vivid language—such as her description of Devin's mind in a moment of panic being "battered by fear and confusion like a bird beating its wings against the bars of a cage"—is incredibly effective. Likewise, the straightforward third-person narration and the gradual resistance that builds among the children to the unique horrors at the home are convincingly well-paced. A standout in the genre's crowded landscape. (Dystopian thriller. 10-16)
Starred Review for Kirkus Reviews (Thu Apr 28 00:00:00 CDT 2022)A group of orphans uncovers a sinister plot in this chilling and engrossing tale filled with detailed, sharply drawn characters. Sometime in a future rife with climate crisis and brutal polarization of wealth, Devin buries his beloved grandfather and sets out to find someone to help him maintain the farm on which he's grown up. In the city, he struggles to find enough food to live on until he meets a clever, street-wise girl named Kit. When Devin is invited by another boy to the Gabriel H. Penn Home for Childhood and insists that Kit be included too, the pair is initially delighted at the abundance of food and other comforts, but they rapidly begin to see that something terrible underpins the home. There are many familiar tropes here, the dystopian setting and the uncanny perfection of the orphanage among them. Yet Unsworth's use of unadorned but vivid language—such as her description of Devin's mind in a moment of panic being "battered by fear and confusion like a bird beating its wings against the bars of a cage"—is incredibly effective. Likewise, the straightforward third-person narration and the gradual resistance that builds among the children to the unique horrors at the home are convincingly well-paced. A standout in the genre's crowded landscape. (Dystopian thriller. 10-16)
Horn Book
Science Books and Films
School Library Journal Starred Review
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
Voice of Youth Advocates
ALA Booklist
Wilson's Junior High Catalog
Wilson's Children's Catalog
Kirkus Reviews (Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)
Starred Review for Kirkus Reviews (Thu Apr 28 00:00:00 CDT 2022)
"What is this place?" In a drought-stricken world, Devin and his grandfather have barely scraped out a living on their isolated farm. When his grandfather dies, Devin knows he can't manage alone and heads for the nearest city to find help. But in the city he finds only children alone like him, living on the streets. Then a small act of kindness earns Devin an invitation to the Gabriel H. Penn Home for Childhood--a place with unlimited food and toys and the hope of finding a new home. But Devin soon finds out that the Gabriel Penn Home is no paradise. A zombie-like sickness afflicts many of the children who live there--and it will claim Devin, too, unless he can become the first to find a way out of this dystopian nightmare. "[A] chilling and engrossing tale . . . A standout." -- Kirkus Reviews, starred review "Fast-paced and gripping. An original dystopian story." -- School Library Journal, starred review "A timeless story that deserves to become a children's classic for decades to come." -- The Christian Science Monitor A Summer 2014 Kids' Indie Next List Pick One of the Christian Science Monitor's 25 Best New Middle Grade Novels of 2014