Perma-Bound from Publisher's Hardcover ©2018 | -- |
Publisher's Hardcover ©2018 | -- |
Hurricane Sandy, 2012. Juvenile fiction.
World War, 1939-1945. France. Juvenile fiction.
Grandmothers. Juvenile fiction.
Grandparent and child. Juvenile fiction.
Lost articles. Juvenile fiction.
Grandmothers. Fiction.
Grandparent and child. Fiction.
Hurricane Sandy, 2012. Fiction.
Fountain pens. Fiction.
World War, 1939-1945. Fiction.
Lost and found possessions. Fiction.
Queens (New York, N.Y.). Juvenile fiction.
Queens (New York, N.Y.). Fiction.
For fans of historical fiction and natural disaster stories comes an engaging novel that alternates between WWII in rural France and 2012 in New York City. Lily is a brave, independent-minded tween tending to her elderly grandmother in a nursing home when the two become displaced amid intense flooding during Hurricane Sandy. Her grandmother Colette's memory is spotty, and when a beloved Montblanc pen goes missing, Lily sets out to recover it in what becomes an illuminating journey into her grandmother's past. As a child, Colette a Wallcreeper sguised herself as a boy and aided the French Resistance. The two time lines make for a fast-paced read, with danger and suspense in both narrative arcs. The intense friendship forged by war and Lily's own deep bond with her grandmother provide tender moments of connection. While an author's note provides some further context, for many this will be a jumping-off point into the French Resistance. A solid next choice for those who enjoyed Kimberly Brubaker Bradley's The War That Saved My Life (2015) and Alan Gratz's Refugee ? (2017).
Horn BookTwelve-year-old Lily helps to evacuate her granny from a nursing home during Hurricane Sandy and, in the chaos, loses Granny's old Montblanc pen. Lily's search for the pen in post-storm New York alternates with flashbacks to Granny's activities in the French Resistance during WWII. Carelli provides an interesting juxtaposition of different types of danger and valor across the decades.
Kirkus ReviewsThe intertwined stories of one 12-year-old in hurricane-flooded New York City in 2012 and another in Nazi-occupied France in 1944.Lily loves visiting her grandmother Colette in the nursing home despite Granny's dementia. Granny tells stories of her travels, and Lily runs errands for the staff. Superstorm Sandy forces the evacuation of the home from Queens to Brooklyn with the assistance of the National Guard. Lily's an invaluable help—soothing her grandmother and organizing food donations—but in the chaos, she loses a fountain pen of Granny's. Lily's timeline, recounted in a first-person, past-tense narration, alternates with that of 12-year-old Colette, a baker's daughter in war-torn France, in the third-person present tense. Everyone's terrified of the occupying Germans, but Colette wants to help fight the invaders somehow. Disguised as a boy, she works for the Resistance, delivering secret messages, counting German soldiers, and even derailing a train. At any moment she might be arrested and tortured, but with her new friend Marguerite, Colette's brave enough for anything. Meanwhile, in the present day, Lily's quest to find a replacement for her grandmother's lost pen takes her around flood-ravaged New York City and reveals secrets of her grandmother's past. Lily, her grandmother, and those characters with identifiable race appear to be white. The wholesome contemporary survival tale combines surprisingly well with a spy thriller packed with invisible ink, an exploding cigarette case, and all kinds of secret agent gadgets.A quick-moving two-in-one success (Adventure/historical thriller. 9-12)
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)Carelli alternates contemporary and historical fiction in this novel about 12-year-old Lily and her 80-year-old, French-born maternal grandmother, Collette. The contemporary story, told by Lily, takes place in New York City over nine days in fall 2012, during Hurricane Sandy. The historical narrative offers a third-person retelling of Collette-s undertakings as a 12-year-old member of the French Resistance during WWII, lasting from winter through late summer 1944 in the South of France. Lily and Collette have always been close, and when Sandy forces evacuation of the Queens nursing home where Collette lives, Lily is by her side, helping to move and resettle residents. (Lily-s anxious mother, stuck in Manhattan, communicates worriedly via cellphone.) Interspersed with the sometimes frightening challenges of the relocation are stories of Collette-s dangerous wartime work with another young woman. When Lily loses Collette-s antique fountain pen, mysteriously precious to her grandmother, she embarks on a hunt for a replacement, which serendipitously takes Lily on an adventure in which she learns the details of her grandmother-s wartime history. While the novel doesn-t quite succeed in building suspense, and the heartwarming ending strains credibility, Carelli realistically depicts the warm, complex relationships between daughter, mother, and grandmother. Ages 8-12.
Gr 4-6 Superstorm Sandy and the French Resistance in World War II are cleverly woven together in this intergenerational story about 12-year-old Lily and her beloved grandmother, Collette. In October 2012, Lily is visiting Collette in a Queens nursing home when the storm hits. When the nursing home floods, Lily helps evacuate residents, organize food, and reassure and resettle the residents in a Brooklyn shelter. Her worried, stranded mother accedes to Lily and Collette's request to stay together until the nursing home reopens. Anxious and distraught, Collette entrusts Lily with a small red box containing a Montblanc pen of seemingly great significance. When Lily accidentally loses the pen, a frantic search begins. With the help of her best friend, Johnny; a pen expert; and his French-speaking daughter, Lily embarks on a quest to retrieve the pen and uncover her grandmother's unknown past. In alternating chapters, Collette's dangerous 1944 participation in the French Resistance in Brume, France, unfolds. Secret signatures, harrowing missions, a special friendship, and code names are revealed to readers and eventually discovered by Lily. Lily is spirited, compassionate, resourceful, and independent. This lively story is enriched by vivid depictions of Superstorm Sandy's turmoil and impact, actions of supportive staff and helpful strangers, her grandmother's daring deeds during World War II, and Lily's placating, dutiful but often disingenuous cellphone calls to her concerned mother. VERDICT Lily and her grandmother's juxtaposed stories of bravery will captivate middle grade readers and spark interest in better understanding the life, times, and experiences of older generations. Gerry Larson, formerly at Durham School of the Arts, NC
ALA Booklist (Mon Oct 01 00:00:00 CDT 2018)
Horn Book
Kirkus Reviews
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
School Library Journal (Mon Oct 01 00:00:00 CDT 2018)
Wilson's Children's Catalog
While helping her granny Collette evacuate to a makeshift shelter in Brooklyn during Superstorm Sandy, Lily uncovers secrets of her grandmother's past as a member of the French Resistance during WWII.
Queens, 2012.
Hurricane Sandy is flooding New York City, and Lily is at a nursing home with her grandmother, Collette. Lily visits Collette often, as she is beginning to lose her memories. When the National Guard shows up to evacuate the building and take them to safety at the Park Slope armory in Brooklyn, Lily's granny suddenly produces a red box she's hidden in a closet for years. Once they get to safety, Lily opens the box, where she finds an old, beautiful Montblanc pen. Granny tells Lily that the pen is very important and that she has to take care of it, as well as some letters written in French.
But Lily loses the pen in the course of helping other nursing home residents, and as she searches the city trying to find it, she learns more about her grandmother's past in France and begins to uncover the significance of the pen with the help of her best friend, a quirky pen expert, and a larger-than-life, off-Broadway understudy. Told in alternating sections (2012 and 1944), this engaging book explores a deep friendship during difficult times and the importance of family.