E ARC Provided by Edelweiss Plus
We all would love to have wishes granted, but it's a process that often has difficulties. Voigt, who absolutely ruled the 1980s Young Adult scene with titles like The Tillerman Saga (1981), Izzy Willy-Nilly(1986), and Tell Me if the Lovers Are Losers (1982), is back after a long break with a middle grade fantasy title. In it, four children all find envelopes delivered to them with instructions to "make a wish". Bug, whose large family is crowded into an apartment over the family's sporting goods store, initially wishes to win a skateboard and then a Lego set, but eventually finds that these wishes were wasted, and that he is happiest when he helps people find what they should wish for and help it come true. Zoe wishes for her parents to stop fighting, only to have them stop speaking to each other. Her father moves out, and the parents even want to split up her and her brother, Connor. How can she reframe that wish? Casey wishes for a dog even though she knows her busy and abrasive mother, Faye, won't allow one. Instead, a neighbor asks Casey to dog sit Calvin, and when the neighbor doesn't return, it takes some wise wishing to be allowed to keep her new pet. Finally, Billy wishes to have a unicorn, and is happy to hang out with the magical creature and race it, but he soon realizes that a wish that makes him happy might not make the unicorn happy.
There have been a few middle grade books that deal with wishes. Snyder's Bigger Than a Breadbox is similar to this book, since it deals with the fact that items and things wished for come at a cost. Hubbard's You Wish involves a lifetime of birthday wishes, so is rather charming. Whitesides' The Wishmakers is probably my favorite because it's goofy and action packed. Reader who enjoyed the Best Wishes series (by a variety of authors, including Sarah Mlynowski, Debbie Rigaud, and Christina Soontornvat) might like this new book, which evokes classic tales of everyday magic like MacDonald's Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle and Eager's Half Magic.