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Greetings from Nowhere

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Don't miss Barbara O'Connor's other middle-grade work―like Wish; Wonderland; How to Steal a Dog; Fame and Glory in Freedom, Georgia; The Fantastic Secret of Owen Jester; and more!

From an author long recognized for her true Southern voice and heartfelt characters, Greetings from Nowhere , with its four intertwining stories, brings Barbara O'Connor's work to a new level of sophistication.

Aggie isn't expecting visitors at the Sleepy Time Motel in the Great Smoky Mountains. Since her husband died, she is all alone with her cat, Ugly, and keeping up with the bills and repairs has become next to impossible. The pool is empty, the garden is overgrown, and not a soul has come to stay in nearly three months. When she reluctantly places a For Sale ad in the newspaper, Aggie doesn't know that Kirby and his mom will need a room when their car breaks down on the way to Kirby's new reform school. Or that Loretta and her parents will arrive in her dad's plumbing company van on a trip meant to honor the memory of Loretta's birth mother. Or that Clyde Dover will answer the For Sale ad in such a hurry and move in with his daughter, Willow, looking for a brand-new life to replace the one that was fractured when Willow's mom left. Perhaps the biggest surprise of all is that Aggie and her guests find just the friends they need at the shabby motel in the middle of nowhere.

This title has Common Core connections.

224 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2008

85 people are currently reading
1648 people want to read

About the author

Barbara O'Connor

55 books662 followers
Barbara O'Connor's awards include the Parents Choice Gold and Silver Award, American Library Association Notable Books, IRA Notable Books for a Global Society, School Library Journal Best Books, and Kirkus Best Books. Her books have been nominated for children's choice awards in 38 states and voted as a state favorite by children in South Carolina, Indiana, Kansas, and South Dakota.

Barbara was born and raised in Greenville, South Carolina. She draws on her Southern roots to write award-winning books for children in grades 3 to 6.

She currently lives in Asheville, NC. Her latest book is Wish, a middle grade novel published by FSG.

http://us.macmillan.com/author/barbar...

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5 stars
657 (33%)
4 stars
707 (36%)
3 stars
452 (23%)
2 stars
109 (5%)
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35 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 307 reviews
Profile Image for Penny Wood.
67 reviews30 followers
July 14, 2018
I love Barbara O'Connor, and her style of writing, and this was the one that introduced me to her. She captures the south beautifully in her writing, and it's so perfect. The characters were so real I expected them to jump off the pages. And the end was so lovely.
"Greetings From Nowhere" certainly has a place "Somewhere" in my heart.
Profile Image for Josie M..
82 reviews2 followers
April 4, 2015
I will always love this book. I first read this book as a 11 year old, and loved it. I decided to pick it up again as a 15 year old, curious as to whether or not I would enjoy it just as much as I enjoyed it the first time. I did.
This book is beautifully written, It follows 4 unique characters whose lives intertwine and weave together in a way that is incredibly special.
In particular I enjoyed the characters of Willow and Aggie. Aggie, the oldest character in the book, brought so much emotion into the story, and as a reader your heart ached for the loss that she has recently undergone. Willow is a powerful character throughout the book, she is mature and caring and provided a levelness to the story. The other two characters in this book, Kirby and Loretta, were special as well. Kirby represented the imperfectness and unfairness of the world and the hasty generalizations placed on him. Loretta was so sweet and innocent. but at time could be a little but 'in your face' and annoying. Beyond the main characters in the story there were a few supporting characters that held the story together.
I think that one of the themes presented throughout this book is: No matter how we meet someone or how long we are in their lives, sticking together, being there for each other, and helping one another can impact and change lives for the better.
I loved the setting of this book. It really set the mood for the story.
The plot of this book was done well and has the ability to appeal to a wide range of readers.
If you are looking for a sweet story (and a fast read!) I would consider picking this book up.
Profile Image for Heather Moore.
614 reviews7 followers
January 12, 2022
This is my first Barbara O’Connor and I just loved it so much. I will definitely be reading more from her. This book is a quick read and so full of heart. It made for a great fast read when I was feeling bogged down in my reading life.
Profile Image for Betsy.
Author 11 books3,285 followers
August 3, 2008
One Sentence Review: O'Connor knocks another one clean out of the park with a really wonderful tale of several very different kids and one old, run-down, defunct motel.
Profile Image for Jan Carlson.
948 reviews
January 25, 2016
Barbara O'Connor writes realistic fiction for children that has kids who are facing true life challenges. In this book, the lives of 3 children become interwoven as they all stay at the same old motel. Each child has a burden: a mother who left, an unknown birth mother who died, and uncaring parents. Even though this could be a depressing book, it was very well done and shows how children and adults can rise above the worst situation.
Profile Image for Abigail McKenna.
919 reviews151 followers
March 30, 2018
She pushed herself out of the chair and headed down the path out of the garden. But before she rounded the corner of the motel, she looked up at the mountain sky and said, "This has been one heck of a parade, ain't it, Harold?"

To be honest, I don't know what to rate this book. 4 stars? 3.5 stars? Somewhere in between?

This book is something special, I will say that. It felt like, and bear with me on this description, one of those movies that comes on the TV while you're at your Grandma's and you think "oh, I haven't seen this in awhile", and you watch it, and all is right with the world for 90 minutes or so. Despite never reading it before, it had a sense of nostalgia. It's theme song, I've decided as I write this review and listen to it, is "For Forever" from Dear Evan Hansen. It's got a similar vibe.

This is a book about life, and about how life (or, to me, God) works in mysterious ways to get us to meet each other. We follow four different characters, all of whom need the others to heal the broken bits of their life. There's Aggie, who's just lost Harold and is now losing their motel, who talks to Harold in the tomato patch and has a cat so ugly that that's what she named it. There's Willow, who's just lost Dorothy and keeps an old calendar just because it has her writing in it, who collects china horses and doesn't like her father's new mousetrap of a heart. There's Kirby, who's on his way to yet another reform school he doesn't really want to go to, who just needs someone who doesn't look at him with disappointed eyes. And then there's Loretta, who's just lost someone she didn't know, her other mother, who wants to be as beautiful as the girl in the picture and walk where she did. Their paths converge at the Sleepy-Time Motel, and they learn about life through things like pig latin, the bottom of empty swimming pools, and rubies.

I feel like this book was so close to being a new favorite. It's reminiscent of other favorites I've had in the past, but it just missed the mark. But it contains some of my favorite tropes (elderly person and children bond and become friends, friendship in odd ways, friendship in general, tbh) and I did enjoy myself reading it. And it was super short.

So, getting to the end of this review, I think it got a solid 4 stars. Yeah.
Profile Image for Shanley Mahsay.
Author 4 books14 followers
October 2, 2024
Barbara O'Connor is the author of this engaging story. It is a realistic fiction narrative about three middle-grade children and a widow, each grappling with complex challenges. The book delves into the lives of these characters, who first meet at the Sleepy-Time Motel, become friends, and help each other overcome their painful hardships.
Profile Image for Alaina.
14 reviews
January 9, 2026
YESSSSSSSSSSSSSS SIRRRRRRRR. Good books and it SLAYEd and it ATE AND LEFT NO CRUMBS!!! It was good but I wanted WIllows Dad and Aggie to get married and then I realized she was an old lady and I got mad. Lololol lolol I feel like thought Barbara O'conner always writes her books dry and hot. In this book it could've been lush and green but no it was hot and red dirt. #BRUH.
Profile Image for Jennie.
13 reviews
October 10, 2014
Greetings From Nowhere is a book that everyone should read in their lifetime. The book follows four main characters, Aggie, Willow, Loretta, and Kirby, and how they find themselves meeting at a motel in North Carolina. Although the book is a bit frustrating with how short the "chapters" are and also how each "chapter" is told from one of the four different points of views, there are definitely moments that make your eyes well up with tears and moments that make you want to laugh awkwardly. Aggie, the owner of the motel, is a widow with a big heart who teaches the kids some important life lessons. All in all, the book is entertaining and has a solid storyline. Take the time to read it and you surely won't regret it.
Profile Image for Hemavathy DM Suppiah-Devi.
549 reviews33 followers
July 6, 2019
Wonderful! Wonderful! Not at all what I expected, and I've read most of Barbara O'Connor's books. And yet she still manages to surprise me. If you are a fan of Fredrik Backman, you'll love this one. ❤❤❤
Profile Image for Emily Snyder.
15 reviews
June 2, 2025
4 stars ⭐️

This was just a quick little re-read to get me through the night we lost him. I enjoyed getting to know each character. Willow was so sweet and in the beginning of the book I was just getting really sad hearing about her mom, especially with graduation emotions. Then kirby I honestly didn’t really care about until the end when he talked about being a “fine young man.” Loretta was kind of a mid character, because she didnt really experience any emotions besides in the beginning finding out her biological mom was dead. Aggie was definitely the most entertaining character but she didnt do much either. This book was sweet but honestly boring. I think it couldve been more entertaining if when they switched perspectives they went into first person, instead of staying in third person the whole book.
2,434 reviews55 followers
October 10, 2019
Sleepy Time Motel is one of those wonderful old vintage motels located in the mountains of North Carolina. At one time the motel was bustling but now it is hidden amongst a country road. Aggie and her husband Harold owned the Sleepy Time, but after Harold's death Aggie has given up. Kirby is on his way to a boys school when his mother's car breaks down on the side of the road. All signs lead to Sleepy Time Motel. Elsewhere adopted child Loretta AKA Lulu is given a box of momentos from her late birth mother and fate leads Lulu and her parents to the Sleepy Time Motel. After her mother deserts them, Willow's father wants to make a new start.. why it is buying the Sleepy Time Motel. This is a great story of how sometimes different people from different backgrounds come into your life and teach you things that you never knew about yourself.
Profile Image for Margaret.
169 reviews1 follower
July 24, 2024
This is the second book I have read by this author, who writes middle-grade novels. I love her writing style and how she crafts stories that are so real. This is a story of Aggie, the owner of a tiny, rundown motel that has seen better days, and three families who stay there at the same time and end up changing their own lives and Aggie’s in unexpected ways.
Profile Image for Tamara York.
1,517 reviews28 followers
April 13, 2022
Short, wholesome book set at an old Smokey Mountain motel. I like the multiple perspectives that got to the heart of each character. A nice relaxing read.
Profile Image for Lee.
253 reviews2 followers
February 26, 2025
Sometimes you don't need 500 pages to fall in love with book characters
Profile Image for Caitlin.
117 reviews3 followers
March 13, 2022
It is refreshing to read a book about intergenerational friendships and the possibilities of starting over.
I forgot that before 2008 kids did not go around with their faces buried in devices and a general lack of interest in older people.
The friendships described in this story feel almost quaint and antiquated. I don't think they are unrealistic, but I have a hard time imagining them now.
Profile Image for Jenny.
1,971 reviews47 followers
February 7, 2025
Sometimes, a simple, very spare style of writing can be gorgeous and meaningful. Sometimes, it just feels insulting to its readers. This book, unfortunately, leans toward the latter. It's one of those books where you meet a whole cast of characters who each have A Problem (death of a spouse, divorced parents, death of a bio mom, being sent away to reform school, etc), and they all get thrown together in one place where they can, if not exactly solve all their problems, at least process them together in a heartwarming(ish) way. It's not a formula I hate, but it's also one that really needs to be done well. This one wasn't.
47 reviews
June 14, 2016
Didn't realize until I finished the book that this is the author of How to Steal a Dog, a book that stole my heart as this one did. Don't be swayed by the fact that this is a book for children/tweens. This is a story of a group of people who didn't know they needed one another until they all show up at a run-down motel off the Interstate in the Great Smokey Mts. Widowed Aggie and Harold had run the motel for years but, with Harold's passing, Aggie just can't handle the motel but she can't leave because this is where Harold "is." Willow's dad buys the motel unseen after his wife cut a trail leaving him and Willow alone. Kevin's mom's car breaks down near the motel on the way to take Kevin to reform school. Loretta's family is following a trail of Loretta's deceased birthmother (and this family is the only well-adjusted one in the bunch.) This ill-assorted group of people find that they need each other and become family by the end of the book. Just a beautiful book.
Profile Image for Matthew Winner.
103 reviews63 followers
March 8, 2009
I love this book! I love that it's written in different voices (changing each chapter as we experience the story through a different character's persepective). I love the southern feel of the story. I loved How to Steal a Dog and, like in that story, I love that she perfectly captures the generational differences between our characters in the story.

A worthy read for any reader.
Profile Image for Sara.
195 reviews7 followers
October 14, 2013
What a great juvenile book about loss, divorce, and other major woes. Three kids and an older lady are the main characters who each learn from one another how fortunate that they all are. They all learn that there is more to their lives and life is not as bad as it seems.
I read this for a reading challenge and it was a great pick!
Profile Image for Janis Skoczylas.
481 reviews3 followers
February 4, 2017
Ebob book #5

This one was just okay. I found it a little cliche and sappy. I didn't really connect with the characters. there was nothing inherently wrong with it, but it's not one I would recommend to people. I also found the premise a little unrealistic, and the characters undeveloped. The only character I was really interested in was Kirby, and his story really went nowhere.

2 reviews
March 8, 2012
I think these are the best books i have ever read i mean not like the best of the best but i just LOVED this book but not as much as How To Steal a Dog! My teacher read this to us and i thought it was really good!
Profile Image for Nicole Bennett.
73 reviews40 followers
October 29, 2016
A sweet book describing the unlikely community forged between an odd group of characters at a run-down motel, that's in need of as much TLC as its owners and traveling tenants are. This was recommended to me by my 9-year old who read it and thought I'd like it. She was right.
Profile Image for Stacey.
241 reviews3 followers
December 3, 2015
A great book about new beginnings and second chances. Love the characters!
Profile Image for Tanvi  N. 8B.
17 reviews3 followers
September 22, 2016
This is a book that has different points of view from Aggie, Willow, Loretta, and Kirby.It is a really good book!!!
Profile Image for Jaime.
146 reviews2 followers
Read
January 2, 2020
My 9 year old and I took turns reading this to each other and it was as wonderful as I had expected. We love Barbara O'Connor.
2 reviews
February 2, 2020
We begin our tale with Aggie, who’s unable to keep up with the increasingly difficult challenges of running a motel. Although it’s clear that she loves the motel and the echoes of her life that haunt its empty rooms, the most logical choice is to sell it, and so that’s what she decides to do. Given that the loss of the motel in many ways mirrors the loss of her husband and the life they shared there, it’s understandable that Aggie soon gets cold feet.

Willow, whose father sees the classified ad, is also no stranger to loss. After her mother leaves the state (and her husband and daughter), Willow’s father decides that buying the Sleepytime Motel might just be the ticket to fixing his broken heart. Willow’s broken heart, however, is not so easily fixed. Without the proper tools to deal with her abrupt loss, she’s left alone in her backyard to speak her mother’s name aloud like some tiny, defiant incantation. When her father buys the motel, however, Willow meets Aggie and realizes that she has the power to be strong in front of others.

The second child to end up at the motel is Kirby, who at first is defined more by the contents of his pockets and his mother’s angry words than by his own internal narrative. When his mother’s car breaks down as she’s driving him to reform school, the motel becomes their home until his stepfather can send money to fix the car. As the story progresses, O’Connor grants us brief glimpses of Kirby’s self-awareness and his desire to be seen as more than just the “bad” child, but by the end of the tale, his story is the most unclear — what will his new school be like? Will his time at the motel help him open his heart and his pockets to others?

Loretta, the third child and final narrator, has the least tumultuous tale. Loretta knows she’s loved by her parents, and while her journey is focused on retracing the steps of her biological mother, it’s not a trip borne of the desire to fill some gaping hole in her heart. She’s curious, gregarious, and generous, and given the overwhelming love showered upon her by her parents, it’s no wonder that she seems so well-adjusted in comparison to her peers.

O’ Connor is no stranger to writing about loss, but it was fascinating to see the lengths to which she explored Aggie’s heartbreak, particularly given that Aggie is an adult narrator in a children’s book. While Aggie is physically (and sometimes mentally) removed from the bustling world out by the interstate, she is still able to forge an emotional connection to the kids because her way of thinking and speaking is so simplistic that it’s almost childish. She delights in simple things like Ugly, her cat, tomatoes, printed motel soap, and tiny horses made of china, which both endears her to the children at the motel and makes her an interesting character for young readers. I especially loved the bond between Aggie and Willow. While the loss of a spouse is a very different loss than that of a parent, the two are able to help each other grieve and continue working through their pain.

In truth, all of the characters are beautifully written, even those whose backstories are glossed over, like the parents of Loretta and Kirby. The scenes where the children interact with one another are delightfully pure and accurate representations of how children behave in real life.

The motel itself was another standout in this novel. It’s lovingly described in such detail that it’s hard to believe that it isn’t out there in the mountains right now, empty pool and all.

This novel is short, and it tiptoes from chapter to chapter as delicately as Willow tiptoes around in her plastic shoes. There’s no sudden climax, no heartbreaking twist, but the characters and the location are clearly defined and powerful enough to drive the story. Willow eventually hears from her mother and convinces her father that Aggie and Ugly belong with them at the motel, Kirby realizes that he’s more than the narrative that his mother has created for him, and Loretta ends her journey early, at peace with what she’s found of her mother. The motel itself gets some TLC, and the implication is that the fresh paint and new sign will be enough to save it.

The ending isn’t happy, exactly, but nor is it sad. It simply reads as a moment in time centered around a place that can change you, if only you’re willing to let it.
Profile Image for Valerie McEnroe.
1,726 reviews63 followers
July 12, 2019
Oh boy do I love books that remind me of the good ole days when the pace was slower and people got to know one another. Barbara O'Connor accomplishes this with a book set in the present in one of those roadside motels we've all wondered about.

The motel is off the beaten path in the Smokey mountains. It's rundown and there hasn't been a guest in three months. The story is told from four alternating perspectives.
--Aggie is the current owner of the hotel. Her husband Harold died in the garden and she has a one-eyed cat named Ugly. She is selling the motel.
--Willow's dad is buying the motel. She's still not over her mother leaving and she's not thrilled about this new business venture. She takes a liking to Aggie and wants her dad to let her stay.
--Loretta receives a package with things belonging to her recently deceased birth mother. One of the trinkets is a charm bracelet. Her adoptive parents are taking her to each place a charm came from.
--Kirby's mom married a creep and she's not the best role model. Their car breaks down and they have to stay at the motel until the creep sends money to fix it. He's on his way to a school for disruptive kids.

All these characters mingle and get to know one another. The entire book takes place at the motel. This may not be a book for everyone. I love character books because I love to see how the author changes and grows them. These characters help one another just by being there, listening, and taking an interest. Here's some quotes of wisdom from Aggie.

"I guan-dern-tee you that as sure as the sun comes up in the morning, that mother of yours loves you to pieces."

"Well, you know, life marches on. And sometimes we have to join the parade whether we want to or not."

Quick, relaxing read.
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