Publisher's Hardcover ©2023 | -- |
Novels in verse.
Cystic fibrosis. Fiction.
Identity. Fiction.
Dolphins. Fiction.
Loss. Fiction.
Family life. North Carolina. Fiction.
A girl with cystic fibrosis forms a special bond with a dolphin.Eleven-year-old Penny Rooney is thrilled when her teacher announces a poetry slam for sixth graders. However, the theme proves daunting: What does she know about herself? She knows she's more than her CF, with its nebulizer treatments, digestive enzymes, and periodic hospitalizations. But sometimes it feels like she knows more about members of her close-knit family than herself and that she and best friend Cricket are practically the same person. When Cricket reveals she's moving from North Carolina to Virginia, Penny can't imagine who she'll be without her. Her sadness eases when an ill dolphin unexpectedly swims into her backyard creek. To Penny's amazement, she and the dolphin, whom she names Rose, can communicate telepathically. But Rose will soon have to rejoin her pod. How can Penny say goodbye to two best friends? In introspective free verse, Penny poignantly navigates an array of tough emotions, including the loneliness of being unable to meet peers with CF in person due to infection risks, the guilt of needing her family's attention, and-notably-the pressure to repress her fear and anger because, as her doctors remind her, things could be worse. Readers navigating chronic illness will particularly appreciate Penny's cathartic, empowering self-discovery. An author's note explains that Baldwin herself has CF. The Rooneys read White by default.A thought-provoking take on illness, identity, and long-distance friendship. (Verse novel. 8-12)
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)Baldwin (
Gr 3–7— Sixth grader Penny has cystic fibrosis, but she's not a tragic figure. She's sick, but a full person. This novel-in-verse follows a framing device of Penny's poetry slam identity assignment, drawn out against her best friend moving, a CF health dip, and best of all, a dolphin floundering in her backyard creek. The poetry angle is slight—the words are straightforward, without many poetic elements—but it does make this story fast-paced. Baldwin notes that she has read books about characters with cystic fibrosis, but never written by someone who had the diagnosis. To her they felt cheap, mawkish. She changes that with this novel, and the difference in hearing it from her mouth is palpable. Cystic fibrosis is a plot point but not the plot point. This quick read also manages to show terrific character growth. Penny accepts the full spectrum of emotion. She realizes she can be lucky and angry, terrified and brave simultaneously. Main characters are cued as white. VERDICT This book will draw upper elementary and lower middle grade students in with the cute animal relationship but will keep them engaged with the emotionally complex, nuanced depiction of a young girl with cystic fibrosis.— Cat McCarrey
Kirkus Reviews (Wed Feb 01 00:00:00 CST 2023)
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
School Library Journal (Wed Feb 01 00:00:00 CST 2023)
An unexpected animal companion helps a girl with cystic fibrosis learn to write her own story in this captivating novel in verse by award-winning author and disabled activist Cindy Baldwin.
Penny Rooney has cystic fibrosis, which means she has to do breathing treatments to help her lungs work. Some days, it seems like her CF is the only thing Penny knows about herself for sure.
From her point of view, everyone around her can make sense of their place in the world. So why can’t Penny even begin to write a poem about herself for school?
Then during spring break Penny spots something impossible in the creek behind her house: a dolphin, far from its home. Penny names the dolphin Rose and feels an immediate bond, since the dolphin is also sick.
But as Penny’s CF worsens, she realizes that Rose needs to return to her pod to get better. Will Penny be able to help guide Rose back to the ocean, even if it means losing her friend?
This heartwarming story, which marks the first time an author with cystic fibrosis is writing a protagonist with CF, will transport readers into a world full of friendship, family, and powerful self-discovery.