Kirkus Reviews
A boy adjusts to a new town as his mother awaits a heart transplant.After living in three cities in the past two years as his mother sought treatment for dilated cardiomyopathy, nearly 12-year-old Graham Dodds finds himself in Sugarland, his mom's Florida hometown. His new roommate, Nick, the surly son of his mom's childhood friend, isn't exactly welcoming. Fortunately, Graham quickly befriends Lou, a plucky girl whose father needs a new heart. When Mom gives Graham her old bird-watching journal, he's convinced that if he spots a Snail Kite-the one rare bird she never found-she'll be OK. But after a contest promises $5,000 for the best Snail Kite photo, Nick and his friends sabotage Graham's efforts. Can Graham spot the bird in time? And could his mother be right-does everything happen for a reason? The symbol-laced plot occasionally seems to reinforce the maxim, which readers may find either comforting or problematic. Miller viscerally portrays Graham's alternating fear and hope, his heartwarming bond with his mother, and his complex feelings for the late father he barely knew. Unfortunately, most secondary characters are one-dimensional, something particularly apparent when a late, abrupt twist invokes the trope of a disabled person serving as a nondisabled character's life lesson. Most characters default to White.An earnest but uneven tale of family, friendship, and hope. (Fiction. 9-12)
Publishers Weekly
(Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
Eleven-year-old Graham and his mother are constantly moving from one city to the next, seeking cutting-edge treatments for his mother’s life-threatening heart condition: dilated cardiomyopathy. He tries to stay positive, especially because she’s the only family he has left. When she’s informed that her last option is a heart transplant, the duo travel to her hometown of Sugarland, Fla., where they stay with her old friend Dom and his churlish son, Nick, also 11, and hope that the local hospital will move her to the top of the list. At the hospital, Graham meets fellow tween Lou, who tells him her father is also waiting for a heart transplant. She’s the first person who understands what he’s going through, and they become fast friends. After finding his mother’s childhood bird-watching journal and discovering that she’s never seen a snail kite, the rarest bird in Florida, Graham and Lou become determined to locate it, convinced that its appearance will be a good omen for their parents. Using compassionate prose, Miller (King of the Mall) tenderly captures Graham’s fear and courage in the face of uncertainty, sensitively rendering his processing of a difficult situation. Main characters default to white. Ages 8–12. (Jan.)