Something Like Home
Something Like Home
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Random House
Annotation: An abandoned puppy helps a girl in foster care find a way home.
 
Reviews: 7
Catalog Number: #381771
Format: Perma-Bound from Publisher's Hardcover
Special Formats: Chapter Book Chapter Book
Publisher: Random House
Copyright Date: 2023
Edition Date: 2023 Release Date: 09/12/23
Pages: 248 pages
ISBN: Publisher: 0-593-56618-1 Perma-Bound: 0-8000-5591-8
ISBN 13: Publisher: 978-0-593-56618-3 Perma-Bound: 978-0-8000-5591-2
Dewey: Fic
LCCN: 2023024530
Dimensions: 21 cm.
Language: English
Reviews:
Starred Review for Kirkus Reviews (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)

A powerful novel in verse about a girl coping after being ripped from her home.When 11-year-old Laura Rodríguez Colón calls 911 to save her parents from a possible overdose, authorities remove her from her home and place her into the care of Titi Silvia, her estranged aunt. Laura, who is Puerto Rican, resists "this borrowed life," anxiously awaiting the day her parents will be released from rehab. One day, she rescues a sick, abandoned puppy she names Sparrow, and he helps her feel better about everything. When the social worker informs her that children aren't allowed to visit the rehab center, Laura hatches a plan to train Sparrow to be a therapy dog and get inside that way. But when her parents leave without completing the program, Laura learns her stay with Titi may become permanent. Laura's distress increases when her mother shows up at school only to be sent away, leaving Laura torn between life with her aunt and love for her flawed parents. With the help of caring friends and adults, Laura learns that creating a new home doesn't have to mean discarding the old. The short sections written in accessible free verse create a segmented structure that mirrors Laura's experiences and drives the storyline. The clear narrative arc and strong symbolic system make the novel cohere, and Laura's emotional landscape is realistically contradictory. Arango's writing is a joy to read, combining strong storytelling, compelling characters, and rich language.Beautifully executed. (author's note) (Verse fiction. 10-14)

ALA Booklist (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)

Laura Rodríguez Colón just wants to go home, but she made the decision to call 911, and now she's living with an aunt she didn't even know she had and learning the ins and outs of kinship foster care. Disgruntled by the situation, mad at herself, and longing for home, Laura stumbles upon someone who needs her just as much as she needs someone: a lost dog that, somehow, her aunt agrees to let her keep. Laura is certain that the dog, Sparrow, is going to be her ticket back to her parents as she trains him to be a therapy dog. At her new school, luckily, Laura is befriended by Benson, a boy fighting sickle-cell disease who happens to be a good trainer, and a great friend who doesn't judge her for her parents' addiction. Full of the author's signature heart-tugging verse, a character you just want to hug, and threads of friendship, family, and belonging, Arango's follow-up to her Newbery Honor debut is a triumph for readers who need comforting encouragement without having to ask for it.

Horn Book (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)

If only life were as straightforward as the Rubik's Cube that Laura loves to solve. When this Virginia-set verse novel begins, the Puerto Rican sixth grader is on her way to a kinship foster-care placement "on the other side of town" with her titi Silvia, whom Laura has never met. Pulled from her admittedly chaotic life with her parents, who are struggling with addiction, Laura copes with the overwhelming changes that a new caregiver, new rules, a new school, and new peers bring, while suffering with extreme feelings of guilt over making the 911 call that resulted in her parents' being placed in rehab. Laura finds purpose in training a dog she rescues near Titi's house to be a therapy animal; her plan is to bring the dog to the rehab facility so she can finally see her parents. Arango's writing is intimate and heartbreaking, tackling such hefty issues as cultural identity, addiction, the pain of displacement and the anxiety it causes, and the adulation and rationalization that a child in pain can offer to adults they love. Arango (Newbery honoree for Iveliz Explains It All, rev. 9/22) accomplishes this with the believable voice of a girl in crisis and by tapping into compassion for all the characters amidst moving scenes of joy and connection. Amanda R. Toledo

Kirkus Reviews (Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)

A powerful novel in verse about a girl coping after being ripped from her home.When 11-year-old Laura Rodríguez Colón calls 911 to save her parents from a possible overdose, authorities remove her from her home and place her into the care of Titi Silvia, her estranged aunt. Laura, who is Puerto Rican, resists "this borrowed life," anxiously awaiting the day her parents will be released from rehab. One day, she rescues a sick, abandoned puppy she names Sparrow, and he helps her feel better about everything. When the social worker informs her that children aren't allowed to visit the rehab center, Laura hatches a plan to train Sparrow to be a therapy dog and get inside that way. But when her parents leave without completing the program, Laura learns her stay with Titi may become permanent. Laura's distress increases when her mother shows up at school only to be sent away, leaving Laura torn between life with her aunt and love for her flawed parents. With the help of caring friends and adults, Laura learns that creating a new home doesn't have to mean discarding the old. The short sections written in accessible free verse create a segmented structure that mirrors Laura's experiences and drives the storyline. The clear narrative arc and strong symbolic system make the novel cohere, and Laura's emotional landscape is realistically contradictory. Arango's writing is a joy to read, combining strong storytelling, compelling characters, and rich language.Beautifully executed. (author's note) (Verse fiction. 10-14)

Publishers Weekly (Thu Oct 03 00:00:00 CDT 2024)

Latinx 11-year-old Laura Rodríguez Colón believes that it’s her fault she was separated from her parents and sent to live with her aunt, Titi Sylvia, a “rich perfect stranger” who resides on the other side of Laura’s Virginia county. If she hadn’t called 911, she thinks, her parents wouldn’t have been sent to rehab for substance reliance, and she wouldn’t be staring down the barrel of an uncertain future with Titi Sylvia, whose emotionally closed-off nature makes Laura feel isolated. Though she’d rather be with her parents, she’s elated when Titi Sylvia lets her keep the abandoned pup that Laura finds in town, which she names Sparrow. When Laura is told that she can’t visit her parents in rehab, she resolves to train Sparrow as a therapy dog, because “Children may not be allowed in Harmonic Way... but apparently therapy dogs and their owners/ are.” Laura’s improvised training seems to go well, until a disastrous event imperils her hard work. In moving, approachable verse, Arango (Iveliz Explains It All) thoughtfully portrays Laura’s guilt and the constant push-and-pull of her desire to be with her parents and her growing connection with Titi Sylvia. Abundant bird facts—which Laura learned on daily walks with her father—add sensitive insight into Laura’s interpretation of family and loyalty. Ages 10–14. (Sept.)

Reviewing Agencies: - Find Other Reviewed Titles
Starred Review for Kirkus Reviews (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
Starred Review for Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
ALA Booklist (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
Horn Book (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
Kirkus Reviews (Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)
Pura Belpre Honor (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
Publishers Weekly (Thu Oct 03 00:00:00 CDT 2024)
Word Count: 25,395
Reading Level: 5.6
Interest Level: 3-6
Accelerated Reader: reading level: 5.6 / points: 4.0 / quiz: 520948 / grade: Middle Grades
Lexile: NP
Guided Reading Level: Z
Fountas & Pinnell: Z
Time and Space


The drive to Titi's house takes exactly eighteen minutes.

I know because my current Rubik's Cube solving time

is about two minutes,

and I solve my scratched-up, faded cube

a grand total of nine times.


I can feel Janet watching me in the rearview mirror,

probably wondering if I'm okay,

and I wish for the hundredth time that I could

twist my way out of her too-clean car,

line my life back up as easily as the sides of my cube,

erase all the ways I messed up this weekend,


so that instead of driving to the rich side of town,

I'd be at my parents' bright red food truck,

and instead of a black bag of packed clothes at my feet,

I'd be dishing up plates of yellow rice for my friends.


Janet doesn't actually care how I feel.

She's just here 'cause it's her job.

So even though she offers to carry my bag

after we park,

even though I'm sweating through my shirt

and my glasses keep slipping off,


I carefully put the cube in my sweatpant pocket,

lift my bagged-up things with my own two hands,

take a deep breath, ignoring Janet,

and start walking by myself toward my aunt's door


and my weird

      weird

         new life.


Did You Know?


Most birds don't recognize their family members

after more than a year has passed.

So it makes sense that I'm wearing

my favorite owl shirt

as I stare at a woman I don't recognize,

but that Janet assures me is my aunt.


Titi Silvia is a doctor,

but one that looks like a model,

like the doctors on those TV shows

my mom won't ever let me watch.


And even though I usually try not to care

about the clothes I wear or how they fit,

I definitely care today

as I feel her staring first at my hair

and then at my wrinkled clothes,

moving down to my socks and slides

and then back up to my stomach,

like everything about me

is out of place, different

from what she'd like.


I don't know how I'm supposed to greet her,

this woman that is basically a stranger

and who looks nothing like me,


so I just shrug at her awkward hola,

wait for her to tell me where to put my stuff,

and then I leave her and Janet talking

and hide in the office,


   aka my (temporary) new room.


My Room That Is Not My Room


Titi Silvia's apartment is beautiful,

but it almost doesn't look real.


It's all white and clean

and full of art that makes no sense,

and I can tell my aunt's really tried to turn her office

into a bedroom for a kid,

because there's a big inflatable mattress in the middle

and she's added a princess blanket that is

pretty babyish

and way too pink,

which she probably bought

because she doesn't know what sixth graders

actually like to watch on TV.


And if I was here for different reasons,

I'd probably just laugh at the blanket

and bounce on the inflatable bed,


but the problem is,

I'm supposed to actually live here.


Titi Silvia already mentioned

something about Ikea and furniture

as I slid past her in the hall,


and who wants a temporary place

to act like a forever one?


Especially when that place

is with a rich perfect stranger

who the social services people keep telling you

over and over and over


   is "safer" than your parents

   is a "good" solution

   is someone you're "extremely lucky"


to have offered you a home.


My Aunt That Is Not My Aunt


I hear Janet leave

and I pick up my cube again.

Not because I want to practice,

but more 'cause I want to have an excuse

not to talk

if Titi Silvia decides to come in.


I don't care what Janet says.

This is not where I want to be.

Especially when my aunt does walk in

(she doesn't even knock!)

and starts talking to me in soft Spanish

   like we're not strangers and

this is our shared language,

   like she's always been around and

this is a super-normal visit

   and not what it actually is.


All I've ever heard about my titi

is that she'd never lend Mom money

   when we needed it,

never help Mom out

   when she was sick,


and Dad always tells me

to ask when I don't know something,

to not keep my questions inside,


but even though I want to ask Titi why,


   why didn't you help when we needed you?

   why did you wait until now to show up in my life?


it's hard to ask questions

when you don't want to know the answers anyway,

hard to talk when your head feels like

   it's inside a bubble

and your body feels like

   shooting up into the air,


harder, even, than listening to my aunt's constant


   hola Laura, hola mi amor


and so without looking up from my Rubik's Cube,

I just lie and say:


   no hablo español.


Yo Sé


The truth is,

I do speak Spanish. A little bit.

Just not the way Titi Silvia does.


Dad was born here

and understands it better than he speaks it,

so I only ever spoke it with Mom.


And if I'm being honest,

whatever we were saying

was more of a mixed Spanglish

than whatever it is that Titi talks.


The food we sold at the food truck?

I got you.

Prices and customer service?

Nobody's ever complained.


But Titi is fast-Spanishing awkward stuff

about her recycling system

and what my new school will be like,

and it's not that I don't understand her.

I do.

But not as perfectly as I did Mom.


Unpacking


Titi Silvia leaves me by myself to unpack,

but it's not like I brought a bunch of stuff.


How do you prepare for the unpreparable?

How do you fit your whole life in one bag?


And how am I supposed to trust social services,

trust Janet,

when she won't trust me back?


Questions I've Asked Janet


How long will I be with my aunt?

What will happen to our trailer?

What will happen to the things I don't pack?

When can I talk to Mom?

When can I talk to Dad?

What does kinship care mean?

Why do I have a caseworker?

What even is a caseworker?

Do my parents know where I'm going?

Who knows where I'm going?

How long will I be with my aunt?


Is this because I called 911?


Is this my fault?


Answers Janet Has Given Me


Did You Know?


Some birds hold funerals

for the birds in their families

that have passed away.


Other birds will cry by empty nests

for a long time

hoping that the bird that died will

   wake up

   come back

so they can all go on

with their normal bird lives.


I'm not a bird,

but in case you can't tell yet,

I kinda wish I was.

Their lives seem so much simpler

so much easier to understand.


My two-bedroom trailer is empty of people now,

   abandoned,

and all because of me.


And it feels like everyone just wants me

to move on

to be cool.


But every time I think about

me living with my aunt,

think about my Crenwood neighbors

gossiping about where we are,


all I want to do is yell

really really loud,

shout at the world that this is not permanent

this is not forever


this was a mistake

and my parents are getting better


and if everyone would just wait a few days

would close their eyes and go to sleep

then everything would swirl back

(like it never even happened)

and we could all pretend


nothing ever, ever changed.


Riverview Elementary School


RES is bigger than my old school,

   nicer

   cleaner

with student artwork on every wall.


My homeroom teacher is Ms. Holm,

whose classroom is full of books and plants,

and I'm happy to realize I'll get to stay with her all day,

and not have to swap classrooms

and memorize schedules

that I know will just get me turned around.


Before? Stuff like that didn't make me nervous.

Now? I feel so lost I could almost cry.


Too many changes,

too many new things,

too many goodbyes and hellos and

silences in the dark,


and so even though I know

I'll only be at this school

for a tiny amount of time,

knowing where I'll spend my day

knowing I have one assigned desk

with my name duct-taped on,


it's not something I needed before,

but today?


It makes me feel like a little

snuggled-up parakeet.


It makes me feel calm.


Picture This


You've been in the same town

with the same kids

all the way from kindergarten

to sixth grade.


And sure,

maybe there's been a new kid here and there,

but probably not a lot

and usually at the beginning of the year.


Then imagine you get to Riverview

on a windy October day,

on your very first year of middle school,

on Picture Day (!)

when you're not expecting any more change,


and all of a sudden there's a new girl

standing in front of your class,

a girl you've never seen before

but that clearly doesn't belong here:


the food truck girl,

the fidgety girl,

the trailer girl


from all the way across town.


Just a Regular, Normal Kid


I try not to stand out,

really, I do.

I didn't know it was Picture Day

when I got dressed this morning,

but I think my plain blue jeans

and black hoodie

are okay,


the gel I used this morning

keeping my thick and wavy brown hair

in a frizzy ponytail

that is at least

semi-contained.


But I'm still the new kid,

which means Ms. Holm

asks me to introduce myself,

asks me to stand in front of the whole class,


'cause teachers somehow

still haven't figured out

how obviously terrifying

having twenty-five pairs of eyes on you is.


How it leaves you with absolutely nowhere to hide.


The Introduction I Don't Make


Hi.


My name is Laura [LAH-OO-RAH]

and I used to live on the other side

of Loumack County, Virginia,

in the Crenwood Trailer Park,

but now (and just for now)

I live with my aunt in this part of town.


My parents are in rehab,

which is why I'm here,

in a school that hands out

organic blueberry muffins for breakfast

and has no writing on the bathroom stalls,


in a classroom where

probably everyone has a perfect family

and nobody has any secrets


and even though I wish

you were all nice and friendly,

I have a feeling


you're not.


The Introduction I Do Make


Hi,

I'm Laura [LAW-RAH].


I Miss My Friends Back Home


I spend my lunch period in the library,

because my amazing introduction

didn't really win me any new friends,

and as I play alone

with the basket of fidget toys

set out on one of the tables,

I wish


(for the hundredth time)


that I knew how to explain to

Remedios, Pilar, and Betsaida

that I didn't ghost them,

I got taken,

that nobody asked me or cared

what I thought about the whole thing at all,


and if it had been up to me

and not social services,

I would have stayed with my parents,


I would have never left home.


Decisions


I know I messed up back in Crenwood.

Janet and Titi don't have to say it out loud

for me to understand that it's true.


But just because I let my parents down

   this time

doesn't mean I will again.


And if Janet thinks I'm just going to

forget everything that happened

   she's wrong

because I already repacked

everything I had unpacked,

my black bag sitting in the closet

all ready to go.


I just have to find a way to fix this,

find a way to undo this,

and then I'll be back with Mom and Dad


and they'll be perfectly okay


and I'll never

never ever

have to make another decision

ever again.


Someone Is Always Watching


I may not have a phone,

but I do have a laptop now,

since every student at Riverview

gets their own to take home.


And when I google Harmonic Way

(the place Janet said my parents are at),

I see pictures of smiling people

and gardens full of singing cardinals

and board games and crafts and baking,

though the Google reviews

are only at 2.9 out of 5.


I'm about to click into some of them,

the reviews,

to try to read what people have to say,

but then my neck hairs start tingling

and my arm hairs start prickling

and when I look up,

there's a kid with braids next to me at the table

smiling

and I slam my laptop shut.


Trust Is Overrated


The kid introduces himself as Benson, he/him.

Says he's in sixth grade (but not my class),

and although I eye him suspiciously,

I tell him I'm Laura, she/her,

and in Ms. Holm's class.


Benson is Black and short and skinny,

but what I most notice

is his humongous smile--

like we've been friends our entire lives

and are just meeting for lunch to catch up.


And even though I'm pretty sure I'm frowning,

he still tosses his stickered water bottle

   up and down,

smiling at me in between sips,

his eyes twinkling into a laugh.


He's weird, this Benson.

Too friendly. Too nice.

But just as I'm about to make an excuse,

say something like how I need to head back to class,

the bell rings

       (thank you, thank you)

and I hurry out,

laptop and backpack in hand.


Dad would tell me I'm being rude,

but it's not like he's here to see this anyway.

And I'm not sure what Janet from social services

would say,

but she definitely made it clear

back at my trailer

that she thought I should feel grateful

for my aunt and my new school,

which she talks about like it's

   a forever thing,

a "positive" change.


Basically, adults know nothing.

Nothing nothing period.


And as for me? I'm definitely not ready

to explain to anyone

and especially not any of the kids

at this rich, temporary school


why I live where I live.


My After-School Routine Because I Live with a Very Controlling Aunt


Get off the bus at the Stonecreek Apartments

and walk to building 1380,

then climb the stairs to apartment C.


Connect my laptop to the Wi-Fi

and then message Titi at work to tell her

   I'm here

even though she could definitely

just check her doorbell camera,

which


(like I'm some sort of prisoner)


already records me on the way in.


Titi Silvia Is the Worst


Organized

and I mean organized

to the extreme.


She has schedules for everything

   like for cleaning (yuck)

and for eating

   or for how she washes and blow-dries her hair

every Tuesday and Friday night, no exceptions,

before pulling it back into a tight bun.

Excerpted from Something Like Home by Andrea Beatriz Arango
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.

The Pura Belpré Honor winning novel in verse, in which a lost dog helps a lonely girl find a way home to her family . . . only for them to find family in each other along the way. From the Newbery Honor winning author of Iveliz Explains It All.

“Trust me: this book will touch your heart." —Barbara O’Connor, New York Times bestselling author of Wish


Titi Silvia leaves me by myself to unpack,
but it’s not like I brought a bunch of stuff.
How do you prepare for the unpreparable?
How do you fit your whole life in one bag?
And how am I supposed to trust social services
when they won’t trust me back?

Laura Rodríguez Colón has a plan: no matter what the grown-ups say, she will live with her parents again. Can you blame her? It’s tough to make friends as the new kid at school. And while staying at her aunt’s house is okay, it just isn’t the same as being in her own space.

So when Laura finds a puppy, it seems like fate. If she can train the puppy to become a therapy dog, then maybe she’ll be allowed to visit her parents. Maybe the dog will help them get better and things will finally go back to the way they should be.

After all, how do you explain to others that you’re technically a foster kid, even though you live with your aunt? And most importantly . . . how do you explain that you’re not where you belong, and you just want to go home?


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