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Library | Call Number | Status |
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Searching... Dallas Public Library | YA Nuanez, J. Birdie | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Salem Main Library | TEEN Nuanez, J. | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Silver Falls Library | YA NUANEZ | Searching... Unknown |
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Summary
Summary
* "Belongs alongside Holly Goldberg Sloan's Counting by 7s , Cindy Baldwin's Where the Watermelons Grow , and Ali Benjamin's The Thing about Jellyfish . Highly recommended ."-- School Library Journal , starred review
An emotional and uplifting debut about a girl named Jack and her gender creative little brother, Birdie, searching for the place where they can be their true and best selves.
After their mama dies, Jack and Birdie find themselves without a place to call home. And when Mama's two brothers each try to provide one--first sweet Uncle Carl, then gruff Uncle Patrick--the results are funny, tender, and tragic.
They're also somehow . . . spectacular.
With voices and characters that soar off the page, J. M. M. Nuanez's debut novel depicts an unlikely family caught in a situation none of them would have chosen, and the beautiful ways in which they finally come to understand one another. Perfect for fans of The Thing about Jellyfish and Counting By Sevens .
"A luminous debut."--Ashley Herring Blake, author of Ivy Aberdeen's Letter to the World , Stonewall Honor book
Author Notes
J. M. M. Nuanez was born and raised in California, but has lived in other places like Texas and Korea. When not reading or writing, you can usually find her outside with her husband and son. In her limited spare time, she likes to play with her cats, make Korean food, and build miniature things.
Reviews (3)
School Library Journal Review
Gr 3--7--When their mama died in a car accident, Jack and her younger brother, Birdie, moved in with their kind, if irresponsible, Uncle Carl. But after 10 months of convenience store food and sporadic school attendance, Carl's estranged brother, Patrick, must take them in. Emotionally distant Patrick, whom Birdie calls "a clam," may cook them proper meals, but he does not understand Birdie's gender creative identity and interest in fashion, or the children's complicated feelings about their erratic mother, her mental illness, and her death. In short notebook entries scattered throughout the novel, Jack observes the adults governing her life and the grief that animates them. Nuanez excels in depicting a complex family dynamic filtered through a child's perception. More than anything else, this novel captures the children's feelings of powerlessness when decisions about where they live, what they wear, and who they can even visit are made by imperfect adult guardians. Also addressed are gender nonconformity, bullying, and adults' misguided solutions to both, in a refreshingly frank and thoughtful way that always centers the children's perspectives and understanding of themselves. As Jack, Birdie, and their uncles stumble toward mutual understanding, they build a community of supportive people--imperfect, unsure, but trying their best. VERDICT This singular story of a grieving and unconventional family belongs alongside Holly Goldberg Sloan's Counting by 7s, Cindy Baldwin's Where the Watermelons Grow, and Ali Benjamin's The Thing about Jellyfish. Highly recommended.--Molly Saunders, Manatee County Public Libraries, Bradenton, FL
Publisher's Weekly Review
Nuanez's debut follows a long tradition of middle grade novels about children virtually on their own, navigating a world of imperfect adults. The children in question are narrator Jack, 12, and her brother Birdie, nine, a gender-creative, fashionably precocious kid whose Alexander McQueen--inspired style is underappreciated--to say the least--in the tiny town of Moser, Calif. That's where the siblings end up, bouncing between their late mother's much older brothers after she dies in a somewhat mysterious car accident. Carl, affirming but unreliable, forgets to send them to school regularly, so they move in with responsible but stoic Patrick, who defends and respects Birdie in his own way despite his stern demeanor. Nuanez slowly unspools the circumstances surrounding Jack and Birdie's mother's death, working up to a revelation that feels both surprising and inevitable, and resists simplistic characterizations, slowly divulging both uncles' strengths and weaknesses with a well-paced, deceptively subdued plot. Sure-handed storytelling and choice details revealed through Jack's observation notebook mark a strong middle grade debut. Ages 10--up. Agent: Susan Hawk, the Bent Agency. (Feb.)
Kirkus Review
Two siblings struggle to adjust to life with their two very different uncles.Twelve-year-old Jack and 9-year-old Birdie, white children named after Jackie Kennedy and Lady Bird Johnson, respectively, are happy enough living with Uncle Carl, eating Honey Bunny Buns (a convenience-store foodstuff that shows up far too often for no discernible reason) and helping him win the heart of his food-truck-operator girlfriend. Their mother died almost a year ago in a car accident following a history of episodes that some may recognize as bipolar disorder, and Carl's tiny town of Moser, California, is less welcoming than their old home in Oregon. Birdie's attendance at school is spotty; classmates and administrators think that a young boy in pink leggings, headbands, and nail polish is distracting, and truancy officers remove the children to live with taciturn Uncle Patrick, who is more than happy to enforce a gender-normative dress code on Birdie. A flat plot basically follows the children through this adjustment period, and much of the conflict centers on the various bullies Birdie has to deal with, including an obligatory scene of homophobic violence in a boy's bathroom. Despite the young protagonists, most of the book focuses on the relationships among the various adults, with the children serving more as instruments than fully realized or engaging characters.A paint-by-numbers coming-of-ageit's readable, but that's about it. (Fiction. 10-14) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.