TOUCH BLUE was one of those books that I read quickly because I loved it so much...and then slowly toward the end, because even though I was desperate to find out how these characters' stories played out, I was so, so sad to leave them behind on the last page. I shouldn't have worried, though - the characters in TOUCH BLUE are the kind that stay with you long after you finish reading.
There's hopeful Tess, who waits on the shore for the ferry boat bringing her father with the new foster kid who's coming to stay with them. He needs a home, but the people of Tess's Maine island community need something from him, too -- a filled seat in a school house. The local island school is in danger of closing because of low enrollment, so the community decides to take in foster children, in part, to keep it open.
While Tess has high hopes for Aaron (she wants him to be like foster kids she's read about in books, like Anne of Green Gables), the reality is more complicated than that, and the amazing characters in this novel face challenge after challenge -- some relating to their futures, and some to their histories.
This is a beautiful book - you'll smell the salt of the Maine ocean and hear the dice land on the Monopoly board. And you'll laugh. And probably cry, too. Maybe even at the same time.
(And for my students reading this review, Cindy signed a copy of TOUCH BLUE to the Global Citizens at her book launch in Vermont the other night. I'll have it available for sign-out in the classroom library this week!)