One Alley Summer
One Alley Summer
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Publisher's Hardcover ©2024--
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Marble Press
Annotation: In the summer before her first year of middle school, word-chanting, rope-skipping Phee skips her way to imagined fame, writes down her innermost secret thoughts from the safety of a treehouse, and imagines in horror that her new classmates will eat her alive. Suddenly, her well-worn alley world feels too small. So when Mercy Jones moves next door, along with Mercy's skateboard and her don't-mess-with-me attitude, Phee sees the chance for her universe to expand. Even if it means leaving some things behind . . . It is a time of dares, of a legendary dog named Bull, of stretching comfort zones, and of old friendships made over in new
Genre: [Novels in verse]
 
Reviews: 2
Catalog Number: #387287
Format: Publisher's Hardcover
Publisher: Marble Press
Copyright Date: 2024
Edition Date: 2024 Release Date: 05/06/24
Pages: 256 pages
ISBN: 1-9583251-2-0
ISBN 13: 978-1-9583251-2-4
Dewey: Fic
LCCN: 2024934905
Dimensions: 22 cm.
Language: English
Reviews:
Kirkus Reviews

A novel in verse about the months before a city girl starts middle school.It's the summer before Phoebe, 11, enters Southside Middle. Everyone says they'll "eat her alive" when she gets there. On Phee's street there's an alley where the neighborhood kids hang out-and a house with a "killer dog" named Bull. She thinks some of the kids are too babyish, while others have in turn outgrown her. With palpable angst, Phee wrestles hard with wanting to break free of the alley and see more of the world, yet she fears the unknown. When cool and prickly Mercy arrives to visit her dad, Phee's eager to befriend her, excited about the chance to try out her skateboard, and she turns away from lifelong buddy Henny. The poetry skips across the page: Phee is a deeply relatable wordsmith, thinking in rhythms that capture the patterns of hopscotch and skipping rope, and expressing raw, conflicting emotions. Words flow across the page, punctuated by repetition, movement, empty space, and run-on words. The poems transform the alley into a character, showing both its smallness and the new experiences it offers as Phee journals about it in her treetop hideaway. The voices of the characters, brief though they may be, jump off the page with clarity as Ylvisaker captures the alchemy of ordinary youthful times filled with friends and fears. The characters have minimal physical descriptions; the cover art depicts Phee and Mercy as white.Transporting. (Verse fiction. 8-12)

School Library Journal (Mon Apr 01 00:00:00 CDT 2024)

Gr 3–7— Ylvisaker tells the story of word enthusiast Phoebe (Phee), 11, the summer before middle school. Phee and Henny have been friends since they can remember and spend their summers outside playing in the alley behind their houses. This summer is a little different, though. They are too old to play with the little kids but too young to hang out with the big kids, which is all Phee wants to do. Then spunky new girl Mercy moves in next door, and Phee sees an opportunity to try new things. She is just trying to find her place in her world and is making new friends while realizing the importance of not leaving behind Henny. Told from Phoebe's point of view, this novel-in-verse is an enjoyable coming-of-age story perfect for middle school shelves. Discovering oneself, making room for old and new friends, and realizing that just because you know someone doesn't mean you know what they're going through are themes that will resonate with many readers. Discovering Ylvisaker's creative expression of the action taking place on the page makes the novel doubly enjoyable. VERDICT A highly recommended realistic fiction title that deftly explores classic tween themes of summer, friendship, and coming of age.— Beth Brentlinger

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Kirkus Reviews
School Library Journal (Mon Apr 01 00:00:00 CDT 2024)
Reading Level: 5.0
Interest Level: 4-7

The summer before middle school is a time of anxiety and change. A pitch-perfect novel in verse about one girl's wish to simultaneously break free and to belong. In the summer before her first year of middle school, word-chanting, rope-skipping Phee skips her way to imagined fame, writes down her innermost secret thoughts from the safety of a treehouse, and imagines in horror that her new classmates will eat her alive. Suddenly, her well-worn alley world feels too small. So when Mercy Jones moves next door, along with Mercy's skateboard and her don't-mess-with-me attitude, Phee sees the chance for her universe to expand. Even if it means leaving some things behind . . . It is a time of dares, of a legendary dog named Bull, of stretching comfort zones, and of old friendships made over in new ways. And it all takes place over the course of one alley summer. One Alley Summer is and easily accessible novel in verse for middle grade readers. Phee, as a deeply relatable character and narrator, perfectly captures the universally fraught time of the summer between elementary and middle school, tapping into the anxiety we all know so well. In the end, it's a positive, feel-good story about friendship and growing up that will evoke both joy and nostalgia in older readers, as they recall the summers of their own youth.


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