John David Anderson has me chuckling, hurting, hoping, and anticipating throughout this truly excellent work. Malcolm Greeley is just like so many tweens and teens—trying to find his niche, striving to make his parents proud but sure he isn’t, hurting and blaming himself when his parents fight, and so much more. Anderson reveals Malcolm’s heavy load but keeps it from being to oppressive by sprinkling humor, cultural references and quirky Lex into the mix. Strong characters, relatable plot and satisfying but not too neatly resolved conclusion makes this a 5+ book for me and will be for my library patrons, as well. Readers from 4th through 8th grade could enjoy it, but the reading level and length may put it out of reach for many at the low end of that spectrum and some at the other end may object to reading a book with a 12 year old main character. Lovers of Jordan Sonnenblick, Joan Bauer, Lisa Graff, and Barbara O’Connor are sure to approve. Content is free of profanity or sex and the violence is limited to an intense food fight. However, there are two places when golf jokes about balls and shafts could raise some eyebrows, but they are fairly benign. Younger readers will miss them entirely and those that do understand will smile at the adolescent play on words and move on. Thank you, thank you for this dARC, Edelweiss!
Note: I do hope that in the final published work that someone figures out how to spell “exclamation mark.” Every time it is used in this ARC, which is fairly often and for good reason, it is spelled “exclimation.”