The year is 1939 and Frostfree, Florida, has not seen rain in months. If the orange groves don't get some moisture soon, many families, including Pidge's, could lose their farms. But if there's one thing this town has plenty of, it's hope. Right now their hope rests in a sixty-seven-year-old Rainmaker from Mississippi who claims she can coax rain from the sky. Pidge has hopes of her own, hope that her brother, Little Jack, will stay out of trouble; hope that her father will lose interest in the pretty church organist; hope that she can gain some understanding of her mother's death. With clarity, and compassion, Alison Jackson explores the life-changing summer of a young girl on the brink of adolescence.
Rounded up. I liked it but I wouldn't recommend it lightly. You have to like the summer-in-the-life-of, growing up kind of books where you need to like the characters to care; also middle grade, probably young middle grade. I do. I like all kinds of books. Ms. Jackson's writing is very good in my opinion and that's the only thing I usually need.
Very interesting story from start to finish. There was a lot of real feeling with the main character dealing with her loss. Also, it was a nice length - not too long but long enough to get hooked.